The lawsuit alleged that Adobe had hidden subscription fees and cancellation charges.
Adobe has now settled the US lawsuit over its subscription cancelation fiasco and is now offering users free services worth $75 million.
By Jonathan Stempel March 13 (Reuters) - Adobe reached a $150 million settlement to resolve a U.S. government lawsuit accusing the Photoshop and Acrobat maker of harming consumers by concealing hefty ...
Adobe says it will pay $75 million to resolve a lawsuit filed by the US government alleging that the creative software giant harmed consumers by making its subscriptions intentionally hard to cancel ...
Adobe has agreed to a settlement with the US DOJ worth $150 million, including a $75 million fee and $75 million in free services for users.
Adobe is paying $75 million to settle a lawsuit brought by the US that accused the company of making it difficult for ...
Adobe has agreed to pay a whopping $75 million to settle a US government lawsuit. The case accused the software giant of harming consumers by hiding termination fees and making it difficult for them ...
The software company Adobe will pay the United States government $75 million to settle a lawsuit which claimed that Adobe ...
Adobe will spend $75.0 million on free services and pay about $75.0 million to settle a US lawsuit over cancellation hurdles.
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Adobe to pay £113M after US Justice Department says it made subscriptions too hard to cancel
Adobe has agreed to a £113 milliom ($150 million) total settlement with the US Department of Justice after the government alleged it buried cancellation fees in fine print and turned subscription ...
Adobe's battered shares fell another 6% on Friday as news that the Photoshop maker's long-time CEO will step down cast ...
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