Adobe expects to face a substantial penalty due to intricate cancellation procedures

Adobe expects to face a substantial penalty due to intricate cancellation procedures

Adobe​ is expecting to pay ‍a‍ significant penalty⁢ to the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to settle an investigation into ‌its service cancellation⁣ practices, the company‌ said in a filing with the ⁤Securities‍ and​ Exchange Commission (SEC).

“We believe ‍our practices comply⁤ with the law and are currently engaging in ⁢discussion with FTC staff. The defense or resolution of ⁤this matter could involve significant⁢ monetary costs or penalties and could have a material impact on our‍ financial results and operations,” the firm⁢ wrote in the SEC⁣ filing.

The FTC has been ⁢using the ⁤Restore ‌Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act to target Big Tech over⁤ negative billing ⁤and cancellation practices.

The​ Act mandates that subscription services⁢ must promptly ⁣honor cancellation‍ requests, ‌not limit cancellations to⁤ phone only, adequately staff customer service, simplify the cancellation process, and ‌immediately accept ‍and process cancellations before the next billing cycle.

Adobe did not disclose what specifically the FTC⁢ is ‌targeting, ​but online forums are flush with ⁣people complaining that​ Photoshop and Premiere Pro have penalties for late ‌cancellation.

In June, the FTC sued ‌Amazon, alleging it enrolled customers in its Prime program⁣ without⁣ consent ​using deceptive designs and made canceling difficult.

Adobe shares dropped about 5%‌ in​ after-hours trading on Wednesday following ⁤the filing and its announcement of lower ⁣revenue forecasts for‌ 2024, overshadowing its recent ‍achievement of over $5 billion in quarterly revenue and a net income of $1.48 billion.

During the company’s quarterly analyst call,⁣ analysts questioned⁣ the​ conservative 2024 guidance despite⁢ the massive AI tailwinds impacting the⁣ market ‍broadly. Adobe’s ​CEO Shantanu Narayen highlighted this⁢ as Adobe’s highest annual and ‍first-quarter guidance, reflecting strong growth‍ ambitions while remaining conservative.

“We believe⁢ that every massive technology shift ⁢offers generational opportunities to deliver new⁢ products and solutions to an ever-expanding set of customers,” Narayen said during ‍the call. “AI and generative AI is one such​ opportunity. We have delivered against this ​strategy and are pleased that a number ​of our groundbreaking innovations are ⁢now seeing ‌tremendous usage⁤ by customers.”

More regulatory ‍troubles for Adobe

Cancellations aren’t the only ​regulatory issue Adobe is facing, as regulators around the world, ⁤including the European Commission (EC), the Competition and ⁢Markets Authority ⁤(CMA) in the UK, and the ​US Department of Justice (DOJ), are pushing​ back ⁤against its acquisition of Figma.

“We remain excited about the strategic opportunity with Figma,” Narayen ⁤said. ⁣“The EC has​ provided a ‍preliminary ‍statement of objections, and the CMA ⁣has issued provisional⁤ findings of competition⁢ concerns.”

In⁣ November, the EU Commission⁣ published a Statement of Objections, outlining how an⁤ Adobe-Figma merger could potentially reduce ⁤competition in ⁤the global…

2023-12-18 09:00:03
Source from ⁤ www.computerworld.com

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