Shutterstock to pay $35M over hard-to-cancel subscriptions

Lihh27 163 points 79 comments May 18, 2026
www.ftc.gov · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (11 comments)

chancek

A great idea of a product is some sort of unified system for companies to correctly manage subscriptions. There needs to be standards for what makes a user flow acceptable or not when it comes to cancellations.

rectang

Did Shutterstock come out money ahead? Is 35 million and the potential for future punishment a sufficient deterrent?

whh

Adobe needs to be next. I had to cancel a card because that was easier than cancelling Creative Cloud.

ktallett

If your business is only viable due to shady subscription practices then it doesn't deserve to be running, whether it's Adobe, gyms, or whatever.

runako

> Shutterstock failed to get consent to charge consumers’ credit cards before charging them for subscriptions This sounds like it should carry criminal penalties?

raincole

It's a dead company walking anyway. It might be the final blow.

bch

Pardon the pedantry, but I the current abbreviation of the price ("Shutterstock to pay $35M") should be "$35MM".

zackify

Can they please do this with at&t internet.

daveguy

I'm old enough to remember when we had a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to push back against this kind of anti-consumer crap. It got doge'd by Dumpty/Musk.

CM30

Good. There needs to be a US-wide law that any method used to sign up for a subscription has to be a valid way to unsubscribe too. If you allow users to sign up online, you should also be required to let them unsubscribe online too. Basically, take the Californian setup, and apply it to the whole US. And pretty much every country in Europe.

weird-eye-issue

One time for my small business I shared a login with one of my employees and they tried to get us to buy some sort of Enterprise subscription because they claimed that dozens of IP addresses were logging into the account and when we refused they simply closed our account. We were paying like over $300 per month and not even using the full subscription limits... We ended up finding a cheaper solution and now just use AI images so yeah it was pretty dumb on their part.

Semantic search powered by Rivestack pgvector
8,303 stories · 78,303 chunks indexed