Purchasing a used car can be a significant financial commitment and a stressful experience, especially when it comes to ...
It will soon be easy to "click to cancel" subscriptions after the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) adopted a final rule on Wednesday that makes it challenging for businesses to opt out of easy ...
The update, released Oct. 10, followed months of intense behind-the-scenes negotiations in which Republican commissioners won ...
The "click to cancel" rule requires retailers ... leave gaps, the FTC said. Trade groups representing car washes, retailers, news publishers, TV providers and other businesses had called ...
The “click to cancel” rule requires retailers ... leave gaps, the FTC said. Trade groups representing car washes, retailers, news publishers, TV providers and other businesses had called ...
The rule prohibits companies from requiring ... Prime service cancellation practices, leave gaps, the FTC said. Trade groups representing car washes, retailers, news publishers, TV providers ...
On August 14, 2024, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) published its latest rule in the federal register, after almost two ...
The "click to cancel" rule requires retailers ... leave gaps, the FTC said. Trade groups representing car washes, retailers, news publishers, TV providers and other businesses had called ...
Last year, we wrote about the FTC’s proposal to massively expand the Negative Option Rule to cover any goods or services involving a negative option or automatic renewal plan, including free ...
The Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday adopted a “click to cancel” rule that requires businesses to make it as easy to cancel a service as it was to sign up. Signed up online? Click to cancel.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Wednesday announced that it finalized its "click to cancel" rule that will require companies to make it easier for consumers to cancel their subscriptions.
Trade groups representing car washes, retailers ... and other last-ditch efforts to keep them. The rule passed 3-2, with the FTC's two Republican commissioners voting against it.