It's so fucking stupid. If you can sign up with a click, you should be able to cancel with a click. There's no justifiable argument against that other than corporate greed.
I do remember one of my most satisfying cancelation calls though. I just kept saying, "No." Just "no". No added explanation. No added reasoning. It frustrated the retention employee so much. They were like "but WHY?" They couldn't try to convince me not to quit since I didn't give them any reasons for why I didn't want it, just that I didn't want it.
Without even looking at the list I know Amazon, Disney and Netflix will be on it.
They know exactly how much they take every month from account that barely use them and they'd like to keep it.
I think they should go one further with the rule. Anybody not using the service for a month gets to have it cancelled automatically, and only resumed when they use it again.
Electronics Security Association
Interactive Advertising Bureau
NCTA The Internet and Television Association
I'm picking up qhat you're putting down about shitty companies but the problem with your guess is that almost 100% of the shitty companies using shitty marketing techniques you encounter in the average week are all outsourced to marketing firms like the three petitioning the lawsuit.
No intention of this being "HAHA YOU WERE WRONG!" Just wanted to let you know there weren't only 3 petitioning companies named in the court document. Unless they list more further into the document than fuckin page 60 cuz that's where I threw in the towel lol.
Nah, it's at least two clicks - the first in the cookie banner to decline all cookies and tracking (which won't save that setting and ask again on every page load/click on the page as you might want to be tracked in two minutes) and another one to cancel.
Wonder when they're gonna do that for Adobe products in Europe. Has to be one of the most scummiest subscription services present day. If you cancel too early you have to pay up a "cancellation" fee for remaining time of the month, or sometimes even more I believe. If you do it too late you'll have to pay for a whole new subscription, and pay for the cancellation fee. I don't even know why they're allowed to pull that shit on consumers.