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    Adobe’s subscription cancelation hidden fees scandal!

    The US sued Adobe for charging a hidden fee to users who wanted to cancel their subscriptions. Here are the details.
    adobe hidden fee

    The US Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sued Adobe for imposing a hidden cancellation fee on users who wanted to cancel their subscriptions. Adobe is accused of forcing users through a complex and difficult cancellation process to discourage them from canceling unwanted subscriptions.

    Adobe offers Creative Cloud products on a subscription basis, paid monthly. But this monthly payment doesn’t mean you can cancel at any time. Most customers are actually locked into a hidden one-year contract.

    After signing up for a free trial, customers are enrolled by default in an annual Creative Cloud plan. Adobe users who want to cancel the annual contract have to pay a hidden fee of 50 percent of the remaining contractual obligation.

    Adobe offers customers a higher-cost, cancelable monthly subscription plan, but the difference is not always made clear to new or existing customers. Adobe’s website lists a monthly fee of $60 for access to all its apps, but that’s only if you agree to an annual contract.

    A true month-to-month plan, which is cancelable, has a monthly fee of $90, and if you pay a year in advance, there are no refunds if you cancel after the 14-day period.

    According to the Department of Justice, Adobe’s arrangement violates the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act (ROSCA). It allegedly hides hidden fee information through fine print and hard-to-notice links.

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    For years, the complaint states, Adobe has profited from this hidden fee, misleading consumers about the true costs of subscriptions and using it as a powerful customer retention tool by imposing the fee when they tried to cancel.

    Adobe also allegedly failed to provide consumers with a simple mechanism to cancel their online subscriptions. Instead, in order to protect its subscription revenues, Adobe allegedly subjected its subscribers to a complex and inefficient cancellation process filled with unnecessary steps, delays, unwanted offers, and warnings when trying to cancel.

    The lawsuit seeks unspecified amounts of consumer redress, monetary penalties, and a permanent injunction preventing Adobe from continuing to use hidden fees to prevent customer cancellations.  

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