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Research Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsResearch Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic

Why does this not surprise me

hanselthecaretaker

High End Bro
Platinum
By Kevin Parrish, published on February 8, 2010 at 3:51 PM


Despite last year's settlement, a lawsuit accuses Symantec of charging credit cards without prior approval.

Last year the New York Attorney General's Office slapped a $375,000 fine on both McAfee and Symantec for renewing anti-virus subscriptions and auto-charging credit cards without prior customer approval. Both companies were found to have inadequately disclosed the auto-renew service to consumers, and were thus forced to pay the fines, change the disclosures, and provide electronic notification of subscription expiration.

Unfortunately, the 2009 settlement did not ban subscription auto-renewals.

Now a New York man has filed a lawsuit suit against Symantec, claiming that the company auto-renewed his subscription and charged his credit card without prior approval. Kenneth Elan of Port Washington, New York filed the lawsuit on January 19 in a New York County court. According to Computerworld, Symantec was charged with deceptive business practices and unjust enrichment.

In addition to the claims, the lawsuit is asking that Symantec refund the money drafted from Elan's credit card. The lawsuit also asked the court to upgrade the complaint to an action-class status, opening the case to other consumers who may have suffered the same auto-update procedure. The lawsuit also claims that Symantec did not give Elan an option to decline the renewal.

"If plaintiff had notice of an opportunity to decline the automatic renewal, plaintiff would not have renewed the license,” the lawsuit stated.

As of this writing, Symantec has not responded to the lawsuit.


Symantec Sued Over AV Auto-Renewals - Tom's Guide


The only reason these companies are still in business is because their crapware is packed in standard to all these vendor rigs from every PC maker. In the end it's the consumer who loses. No wonder more and more people switch to a Mac.
 
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