• Look, here’s the thing. If Amazon Prime wants to charge me three bucks more for ad-free viewing, the scope of the ad-free viewing had better be a whole lot wider than it currently is. There are plenty of shows on Freevee (an Amazon service) that show ads regardless of whether or not you’re paying to have ads suppressed. You don’t get my three extra dollars a month and STILL get to show me ads. That’s not how it workie, Bezos.

  •  xyzzy   ( @xyzzy@lemm.ee ) 
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    5 months ago

    The value proposition of Prime Video for me as an existing customer is so low at this point that it’s not even worth paying for it at all, let alone the extra $36/year to watch their shows ad-free. I’ve watched everything I’m interested in and the shows I liked have all ended, with one heavily qualified exception (Rings of Power). I’d cancel it entirely like I did with Netflix and “Max” if the shipping benefit didn’t make Prime itself so worthwhile to me. Maybe I’ll just delete the app from my media player and move on with my life.

    • The Boys is the only show I’ve cared about in like three years on Amazon. HBO max has some good stuff, but you can sub to that on any service.

      But I also cancelled my prime a year or two ago when 2 day shipping stopped being a thing. That seems to be a common refrain I keep seeing.

      • I still get two-day shipping, along with one-day and often same-day, so definitely worth it to me.

        I forgot about The Boys. Maybe I’ll wait for the next season to come out and then pay $3 for exactly one month in order to binge the whole season.

  •  megopie   ( @megopie@beehaw.org ) 
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    5 months ago

    Hazbin hotel aired, used the free trial month to watch that, canceled before they charged me, not going back to prime any time soon, same issue as most of the rest of the streaming services have. Way too expensive for the amount of content I actually want to watch on them.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Amazon is facing a lawsuit accusing it of misleading Prime subscribers by charging them an additional fee to stream movies and TV shows without ads.

    A proposed class action lawsuit, filed Friday in California federal court, claims breach of contract and violations of state consumer protection laws on behalf of users who saw the terms of their subscriptions with Amazon change when it pivoted to making its ad tier the default for its over 100 million subscribers.

    In addition to being “unfair,” the suit alleges that Amazon illegally benefited by advertising Prime Video as “commercial-free” for years prior to launching its ad-supported tier, which “harms both consumers and honest competition,” according to the complaint.

    The proposed class action seeks at least $5 million and a court order barring Amazon from engaging in further deceptive conduct on behalf of users who subscribed to Prime prior to Dec. 28, 2023.

    Last year, the Federal Trade Commission sued the tech giant for allegedly duping consumers into signing up for its Prime service and then impeding them from canceling their subscriptions.

    A federal judge in 2022 dismissed the proposed class action, siding with Amazon on arguments that its terms of use tell users that movies and TV shows they purchased may become unavailable due to provider licensing restrictions.


    The original article contains 426 words, the summary contains 214 words. Saved 50%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!