NY AG calls Internet discount clubs “deceptive,” pressures retailers to sever ties

By AP
Wednesday, January 27, 2010

NY AG calls Internet discount clubs ‘deceptive’

NEW YORK — The New York attorney general warned Internet retailers Wednesday that they should stop funneling unsuspecting customers into “deceptive” Web discount clubs that have been accused of slamming people with hidden fees.

Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said his office has sent investigative subpoenas to 22 prominent merchants, including Barnes & Noble, Priceline and Pizza Hut, that allow the marketing companies Affinion, Vertrue and Webloyalty to piggyback on their Web sites.

Those companies have been the subject of thousands of complaints in recent years from irate customers who say they were unwittingly enrolled in clubs while buying things such as flowers and movie tickets.

In many cases, the consumers clicked a box offering cash back on their purchase without noticing fine print warning that accepting the offer would enroll them in a club with a monthly fee. Many people learned the truth only when those fees turned up on their credit cards.

“We want it stopped. We believe it is a classic consumer fraud,” Cuomo said.

At least one retailer, the movie ticket seller Fandango, has already agreed to stop sharing customer billing information with the companies, Cuomo announced.

Fandango has also agreed to pay $400,000 in restitution and make better disclosures about any third-party offers on its Web site, the attorney general’s office said.

Cuomo encouraged others to follow suit, saying that while the sign-up system for the discount clubs wasn’t “illegal per se,” it could be considered a deceptive practice.

The companies getting subpoenas included Barnes & Noble, Orbitz, Buy.com, Ticketmaster, MovieTickets.com, FTC.com, Shutterfly, 1-800-Flowers.com, Avon, Budget, Staples, Priceline, GMAC Mortgage, Classmates.com, Travelocity, Vistaprint, Intelius, Hotwire, Expedia, Hotels.com, Columbia House, Pizza Hut and Gamestop/EB Games.

Affinion, Vertrue and Webloyalty, all based in Norwalk, Conn., have been accused of improper conduct many times before and have previously been sued by several states over their sales tactics. They say their practices are legal but have recently promised changes.

After a U.S. Senate committee in November accused them of acting unethically, all three made changes this month requiring customers to re-enter all 16 digits of their credit card number before they are signed up as members.

Previously, that billing information was automatically forwarded by retailers without the knowledge of customers.

“We have listened to consumers, lawmakers and regulators and have led the industry in evolving our practices,” said Webloyalty spokeswoman Beth Kitchener. She said the company also introduced new language on its offering page to clarify that people will be billed for joining a club.

A spokeswoman for Affinion had no immediate comment. A message left for officials at Vertrue was not immediately returned.

A report issued by the Senate’s Commerce committee in November said the three companies have taken $1.4 billion from customers in a little more than a decade. Retailers that gave the companies a spot on their Web sites got a sizable cut of that cash, often worth millions of dollars each.

The report said managers at the companies appeared to be aware that customers were being deceived. One Webloyalty employee noted in an e-mail that “90 percent” of the people getting billed “don’t know anything about the membership.”

Each company also has call centers staffed by workers whose primary job is to process membership cancellations.

Discussion

Nathen
April 9, 2010: 8:58 pm

Important Consumer Notice Regarding Online Financial Transactions:

What you are about to read is not malicious by no means. IT IS VERIFIABLE FACT. Therefore any third party for accusations of being inappropriate may not delete it. IT IS ONLY FACT; and offered up as public knowledge for the protection of others.

This covers your ‘Right To Know’ as a paying consumer on the Internet, and may help many people prevent themselves from being wronged financially.

Pizza Hut is a business partner with a service called Webloyalty. Webloyalty is also known by other names including Shoppers Discount, Shoppers Discount Rewards, and Reservation Rewards.

Webloyalty and its branch entities are the subject of some very very serious concerns involving the removal of money from peoples credit cards and bank accounts without the knowledge of customers.

Consumers considering the use of plastic on the Pizza Hut websites are highly encouraged to do some homework first.

Here’s how.

Google the following names, ‘webloyalty’, ‘webloyalty scam’, and ‘webloyalty pizza hut’.

The material you bring up from these searches will be quite extensive and could take weeks to read. The material in your search results comes from consumers, television news broadcasts, and legal agencies such as courts at State and Federal levels.

Thank you, shop safely by being informed.

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