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FTC Delays 'Click To Cancel' Rule Implementation To July (reuters.com) 17

The Federal Trade Commission has postponed enforcement of its consumer-friendly "click to cancel" rule from May 14 to July 14, giving businesses two additional months to comply. The regulation requires companies to make subscription cancellations as straightforward as the sign-up process, prohibiting practices like forcing customers who subscribed online to navigate through chatbots or call centers to cancel.

The rule, established under former Democratic Chair Lina Khan, unsurprisingly has garnered support from consumer advocates while facing legal opposition from industry groups. A coalition including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and organizations representing major telecom and media companies -- Charter Communications, Comcast, Disney Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Discovery -- has sued to block implementation, claiming the agency exceeded its authority.

FTC Delays 'Click To Cancel' Rule Implementation To July

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  • by aicrules ( 819392 ) on Thursday May 15, 2025 @11:23AM (#65378737)
    Because they are about to lose everything if so lol
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Oh well, it should be clear by now who the government serves, not that anything will be done about it. Just wanna say you have been warned, for a very long time now

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      The delay is simply to get those industries who would be most affected by it pouring millions in donations to Trump.

      You know, maybe to help fix up that new shiny plane Qatar is giving him. It's speculated to cost easily $500M to outfit and it's going to be retired after Trump's term in office is over to serve as his presidential library.

      If those guys and such want to get rid of the rule, they better open their wallets and share.

      That's the real reason. It'll survive if those companies fail to donate enough m

      • by Moryath ( 553296 )

        If Republicans REALLY gave a crap about the First Amendment and rights of citizens in the USA? Here's a few thoughts.

        #1 - Make it illegal for social media companies to permaban or "shadow ban" a US citizen, something they've done constantly to both the left and the right.

        #2, related - Make it illegal for social media companies to force people through automated AI-chatbot forms and other bullshit to resolve issues with bad moderation or crap systems misfiring. Mandatory availability of phone support where

        • With regard to your #1 and #2, you do know that the First Amendment only applies to government not regulating free speech -- not corporations, on their own platforms - right? I get your sentiment, but the 1st Amendment doesn't apply here. What you're proposing is that if Republicans care about the 1st Amendment, they should ignore it and/or try to bypass it.

        • Oh look, you are against freedom of association. What a surprise.

  • I can't contain how much winning we're doing. It's overwhelming! We're drowning in winning!

  • Not enough (Score:4, Informative)

    by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Thursday May 15, 2025 @01:25PM (#65378995)
    Being able to cancel is a start but think of the other shitty practices subscription services engage in:
    1. Setting auto renew to true without obtaining an affirmative yes or no. It should be very simple question "Do you want to autorenew at the end of this period, answer yes or no".
    2. Billing people who cancelled during a "free trial" and ignoring their efforts to obtain a refund. e.g. Whoop is notorious for doing this shit.
    3. Not cancelling people even after they ask to be cancelled.
    4. Misleading consumers with "month by month" subscriptions that have minimum contract periods like 12 months..
    5. Hiding unsubscribe options with dark patterns even if the option to unsubscribe exists somewhere.
    6. Making unsubscribers run a gauntlet of BS to unsubscribe - "hey you'll be missing out on all this cool shit if you leave" x 5 dark screens that have been a/b tested to maximize retention.
    7. Punishing users who cancel early by forfeiting features. e.g. cancel a Spotify free trial and it stops that very second even if the offer was for a full 30 days.
    8. Hassling subscribers with upselling to higher tiers.
    9. Not reminding people when a subscription is coming to an end especially when autorenew is on, nor giving them a link to immediately stop it autorenewing.
    10. Deliberately burying help pages that explain how to unsubscribe so they redirect to some kind of custom retention service. e.g. type "cancel" and it says "to discuss your level of service ring this number".
    11. Not giving affirmative notifications in email when cancellation has occurred and what date service will cease.
    12. Not providing a human contact who can fix issues with cancellation.
    13. Retention teams cold calling people who cancel to strongarm them into changing their minds.
    14. Leaving hardware products broken or crippled by cancellation.
    15. Punitive early exit fees.
    16. Demanding excessive cancellation notice "you must give us 30 days notice" etc.
    17. Not providing a cooling off period after a new subscription is made.
    18. Jacking up the price of the subscription, justifying it by bundling it with something they never asked for. e.g. Office 365 slapping in Co-Pilot to justify a massive price hike.

    I am sure there are many more. Consumer law needs to look at all the way companies are assholes to their own customers and anticipate those things in law in a way which is unambiguous with heavy fines for abuses.

  • For the first time in my life, earlier this year, I had to file an FCC complaint when I tried to cancel my Spectrum Internet.
    We had them for over 4 years and decided to switch to Verizon Home 5G because Spectrum had been ratcheting up our bill in $5 increments for the last few years. There were also a number of outages and the we NEVER came close to the advertised speed.

    I reached out to the online chat support and asked if we could cancel and they said not a problem. After 45 minutes of them pushing for a

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