The legal library gives you easy access to the FTC’s case information and other official legal, policy, and guidance documents.
20251483: Carronade Capital Master, LP; Telephone and Data Systems, Inc.
20251492: ORIX Corporation; Hilco Trading, LLC
20251502: Cortec Group Fund VIII, L.P.; AMCP III Legacy AIV, LP
20251513: White Mountains Insurance Group, Ltd.; AQ Phoenix Parent, L.P.
20251519: SoftBank Corp.; Cybereason Inc.
20251523: Gryphon Digital Mining, Inc.; Hut 8 Corp.
20251528: Valor Equity Partners VI-B L.P.; Elon Musk
Surgical Instrument Service Co. v. Intuitive Surgical, Inc.
20251447: Ferdinand Porsche Familien Privatstiftung; Group14 Technologies, Inc.
20251473: Durare Topco, L.P.; Capricorn Holdco, LLC
20251475: Churchill Sponsor IX LLC; Plus Automation, Inc.
20251489: Suzhou Dongshan Precision Manufacturing Co., Ltd.; Source Photonics Holdings (Cayman) Limited
20251498: Emprise Group, Inc.; TCW Rescue Financing Fund LP
20251499: Mubadala Investment Company PJSC; Tallwood Technology Partners LLC
20251501: Nordic Capital XI Gamma, SCSp; Arcadia Solutions, Inc.
Granting of Requests for Early Termination of the Waiting Period Under the Premerger Notification Rules (June 2025)
Amazon.com, Inc. (ROSCA), FTC v.
The Federal Trade Commission is taking action against Amazon.com, Inc. for its years-long effort to enroll consumers into its Prime program without their consent while knowingly making it difficult for consumers to cancel their subscriptions to Prime.
In a complaint filed today, the FTC charges that Amazon has knowingly duped millions of consumers into unknowingly enrolling in Amazon Prime. Specifically, Amazon used manipulative, coercive, or deceptive user-interface designs known as “dark patterns” to trick consumers into enrolling in automatically-renewing Prime subscriptions.
Amazon also knowingly complicated the cancellation process for Prime subscribers who sought to end their membership. The primary purpose of its Prime cancellation process was not to enable subscribers to cancel, but to stop them. Amazon leadership slowed or rejected changes that would’ve made it easier for users to cancel Prime because those changes adversely affected Amazon’s bottom line.