Symantec, McAfee to pay fines over auto-renewals

The companies will pay $375,000 each and improve business practices

Antivirus vendors Symantec and McAfee have agreed to pay the New York Attorney General's office US$375,000 in fines to settle charges that they automatically charged customers software subscription renewal fees without their permission.

Investigators found that the two companies had "failed to adequately disclose to consumers that subscriptions would automatically be renewed and that consumers would be charged," the office of Andrew Cuomo said in a statement Wednesday announcing the settlement. "Companies cannot play hide the ball when it comes to fees consumers are being charged."

In addition to paying the settlement fine, Symantec and McAfee will now make better disclosures about subscription renewal fees when customers sign up, the attorney general's office said.

Security companies have been offering automatic renewals to their customers for nearly a decade now, but in the past few year it's become much more common in the antivirus industry. McAfee and Symantec say that they prevent customers from having out-of-date antivirus software on their computers. That may make customers safer, but it also makes company investors happy because renewal fees keep rolling in.

Symantec began enrolling North American customers in automatic renewal by default in November 2005, and has since expanded the practice worldwide. McAfee began the practice in 2001. Under these programs, customers pay upfront for a one-year subscription and then, a year later, are automatically billed for the next year's service.

The companies say they have been working with the Cuomo's office for the past two years to improve practices and they have now made it easier to understand and opt out of their respective auto-renewal features

For example, Symantec has now modified its online shopping cart to include better disclosures and an explanation of how to opt out of the program.

Norton users who want to unsubscribe from Symantec's program, can do so on their Norton Account Web page, Symantec said. If you're a U.S. McAfee user, you can call customer support at 1 866 622 3911.

Both companies will now refund auto-renewal fees within 60 days of the charge, Cuomo's office said.

More about: McAfee, Norton, Symantec
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Comments

1

Fred Yontz

Fri 12/06/2009 - 05:57

Antivirus auto-renewal

This clearly should be an opt-in provision, not opt-out. This way the customer has taken an active step to agree to auto-renewals, rather than having the feature slip in unnoticed and, perhaps, unwanted.

2

Anonymous

Fri 12/06/2009 - 11:08

Well said

An increasing number of companies are not just "offering" unlimited automatic card debits, they are arranging their website layout so that most customers are not aware that they are committing to repeat charges for evermore.

The wording used may have been passed by some shonky lawyer using unreadable fine print, but as the previous post says it should be illegal to offer anything other than an informed opt-in.

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