Bipartisan push to simplify subscription cancellations reintroduces the Unsubscribe Act

TL;DR Summary
Democrat Mark Takano and Republican Mark Amodei reintroduce the Unsubscribe Act to curb complex cancellation processes, require explicit consent for charges after free trials, and prohibit auto-renewal, arguing that cancelling should be as easy as signing up. The measure follows an 8th Circuit ruling that blocked the FTC’s so-called ‘click-to-cancel’ rule and comes as the FTC seeks input on reviving similar protections. While consumer groups back the bill, industry coalitions oppose it. Surveys estimate Americans lose hundreds annually to unused subscriptions, underscoring the policy push.
Topics:business#click-to-cancel#consumer-protection#ftc#politics#subscription-cancellation#unsubscribe-act
- House Democrat and Republican to reintroduce ‘click-to-cancel’ bill The Guardian
- The Unsubscribe Act Is Back, This Time With a GOP House Co-Sponsor Subscription Insider
- News/Media Alliance Submits Comments to FTC on Petition to Renew Click to Cancel Rule News/Media Alliance
- EPIC Joins Coalition Urging FTC to Renew Click-to-Cancel Rulemaking to Protect Consumers from Subscription Traps EPIC – Electronic Privacy Information Center
- FTC Click-to-Cancel Revival Effort: Closed Comment Record Reveals Fight Over Scope, Save Offers, and Exemptions Subscription Insider
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
3 min
vs 4 min read
Condensed
87%
640 → 85 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on The Guardian