Adobe under fire from FTC over deceptive practices

Ro, 19 June 2024

FTC (Federal Trade Commission) is launching a case against Adobe due to alleged deceptive practices related to the company's subscription services. According to the FTC, Adobe violates the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act and the commission highlights a few key issues.

Adobe under fire from FTC over deceptive practices

Firstly, Adobe describes its subscription plan as monthly but charges cancellation fees when a user wants to cancel it earlier than one year. Additionally, Adobe places numerous obstacles within the cancellation process, and often, users are led to believe they've cancelled the plan when, in reality, monthly payments still occur.

Adobe usually charges 50% of the remaining subscription payments as a cancellation fee. This could be part of the reason why Adobe's subscription services revenue ballooned from $7.7 billion in 2019 to $14.2 billion in 2023.

FTC points out two defendants from Adobe - the Vice President Maninder Sawhney and the President of Digital Media David Wadhwani.

Adobe's official response states that it would seek legal battle in court and denies FTC's allegations.

If found guilty by the Department of Justice, Adobe would be subject to monetary penalties and it would have to refund customers who were forced to pay a cancellation fee.

Source 1 Source 2


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Reader comments

  • Bored
  • 24 Jun 2024
  • 7kj

Maybe they are specifically targeted as some people do not want to see them as CEOs.

  • Ady
  • 23 Jun 2024
  • XSt

This happened to my sister too. She cancelled one plan and requested a refund for the other plan. But, for the cancelled plan, she was charged the full amount.

  • Dom
  • 20 Jun 2024
  • raM

I think being a CEO for a big tech company unfortunately means that you kinda have to be a terrible person because you’re constantly being pressured by shareholders to keep growing the company no matter what size it is, even if that growth is unsusta...

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