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FTC v. Amazon - Part 11 - Amazon's Knowledge of Nonconsensual Enrollment

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FTC v. Amazon Court Filing, retrieved on June 1, 2023, is part of HackerNoon’s Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This part is 11 of 34.

Amazon's Knowledge of Nonconsensual Enrollment

163. Amazon knows that Nonconsensual Enrollment is widespread. (Redacted)


  1. Redacted


  1. Nonconsensual Enrollment is both so widespread and well-understood at Amazon (Redacted)


REDACTED


  1. In fact, (Redacted), consumers do not always carefully study their credit card activity or notice an Amazon charge for Prime ( especially when they are expecting other Amazon charges for routine pm-chases). (Redacted)


  1. When dissatisfied consumers call Amazon 's customer service to cancel their Prime membership, (redacted)


(a) (Redacted) meaning Amazon has charged them once without consent.


(b) (Redacted) meaning that Amazon has charged them three times without consent.


(c) (Redacted) meaning that Amazon has charged them six times without consent.


(d) (Redacted) meaning that Amazon has charged them twelve times without consent.


168. Amazon (redacted)


  1. (Redacted)


  1. (Redacted)


  1. Redacted) Prime checkout enrollment flow contains design elements that trick people into signing up. (Redacted)


  2. (Redacted)


  1. (Redacted)


  1. (Redacted)



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This court case 2:23-cv-00932 retrieved on September 28, 2023, from ftc.gov is part of the public domain. The court-created documents are works of the federal government, and under copyright law, are automatically placed in the public domain and may be shared without legal restriction.


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