Dumping Us Into Ad Tier Of Prime Video When We Paid For Ad-free Is 'unfair' – Lawsuit

When Netflix launched its ad-supported tier in November 2022, it tried to tempt viewers in with discounted rates, hoping to win new consumers and sell their eyeballs to ad-slingers. But Amazon Prime, well, it went a different route.

Amazon simply shot over an email in December 2023, giving subscribers a heads-up that it would start showing ads on Prime Video early this year, and explained going "ad-free" would cost Prime members an additional $2.99 a month (or £2.99 in the UK). But a lawsuit [PDF] filed this week claims that move was "deceptive, unfair" and contrary to "plaintiff and class members' reasonable expectations."

According to the would-be class action suit, filed by Californian Amazon Prime subscriber Wilbert Napoleon in Washington State earlier this week, he and fellow media streaming fans were asked to "pay extra to get something they already paid for" to prevent the addition of ads. The suit alleges breach of contract and various consumer protection laws. It also contends the move "harms both consumers and honest competition," coming after Prime for years promoted itself as a "commercial-free" service.

The proposed class would include the subset of folks in the United States who bought an annual Prime subscription before December 28, 2023.

The case states:

According to Amazon's Prime Ts & Cs, it can make "changes to the membership fee" at its own "reasonable discretion and according to materially justified as well as objective criteria," and customers with an annual Amazon Prime membership can "switch to a monthly Amazon Prime membership anytime."

A previous lawsuit filed against Amazon in 2022 covered similar ground, claiming the retail giant promised Prime free delivery from Whole Foods after it acquired the company, but later, in 2021, charged a $9.95 delivery fee. Amazon recently filed a motion to dismiss [PDF] the suit saying the Prime Terms give Amazon the "sole discretion" to add or remove Prime benefits, with the court previously agreeing Amazon "had contractual authority to suspend"... "any benefits of Prime membership, including free delivery and two-hour delivery." ®

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