Amazon Accused of Ripping Off Prime Customers With Ads in Watchdog Court Case

A watchdog has taken Amazon's local business to court, alleging the tech giant buried unfair terms in contracts signed by Prime customers

Justin Tomlinson

Editor-in-Chief, Mora Discover

3 sources
Amazon Accused of Ripping Off Prime Customers With Ads in Watchdog Court Case

The watchdog has taken the local business of Amazon, the $3.8 trillion tech giant, to court over allegations of unfair contract terms. The legal action accuses the company of burying these unfair terms within the contracts that Amazon Prime customers had already signed, allegedly leaving subscribers with no choice but to accept advertisements.[1][2][3]

The lawsuit claims that Amazon ripped off its Prime customers through these contract terms. By allegedly hiding the unfair conditions in existing agreements, the company's local business is accused of failing to provide fair options to its user base, leading to the current court proceedings initiated by the watchdog.[1][2][3]

Related stories

Powerful back-to-back earthquakes collapse buildings in Caracas
Powerful back-to-back earthquakes collapse buildings in Caracas
The Guardian

Powerful back-to-back earthquakes collapse buildings in Caracas

Venezuela’s interim leader Delcy Rodríguez has declared a nationwide **state of emergency** after two powerful earthquakes, including a **7.5-magnitude** quake, struck on Wednesday evening, collapsing buildings in Caracas and killing at least **164 people**, with 971 injured and the toll expected to rise.[2][4] For creators and brands, this means a sudden shift to crisis coverage, heightened sensitivity around imagery from Venezuela, and likely disruptions to local partners, audiences, and on-the-ground content production.[2][4] As a next step, review any scheduled Venezuela-related posts and update your content plan to focus on verified information, safety resources, and empathetic messaging while pausing anything that could appear insensitive.

Darren Jones backs Burnham economic plans to reassure bond markets
Darren Jones backs Burnham economic plans to reassure bond markets
The Guardian

Darren Jones backs Burnham economic plans to reassure bond markets

Andy Burnham is set to take over PMQs from Keir Starmer in mid-July, with Darren Jones ruling himself out of the Labour leadership race and publicly backing Burnham’s economic plans, which include only **“a little bit more” borrowing** under a credible framework.[2][3] For creators and political brands, this means a likely **smooth leadership transition**, a Burnham-led government that is signalling **bond-market-friendly economic stability**, and a tightening window to shape narratives around Labour’s new economic direction before he formally becomes prime minister.[2][3] As a next step, creators should prepare an updated content angle or series focused on **Burnham’s economic agenda and market reaction**, timed to the leadership handover in mid-July so they can respond quickly as details firm up.[2][3]

Starmer unveils delayed UK defence investment plan
Starmer unveils delayed UK defence investment plan
The Guardian

Starmer unveils delayed UK defence investment plan

The UK government has officially unveiled a long-delayed defence investment plan, marking the largest increase in military spending since the end of the Cold War. For creators and brands in the tech and aerospace sectors, this shift signals a strategic pivot toward heavy-lift drone technology and national security infrastructure that will likely drive new government procurement opportunities. Review your current content pipeline to identify any projects or expertise related to dual-use technology or defence innovation that could be positioned as thought leadership in this emerging policy landscape.