Friday, May 1, 2026
  • Login
CEO North America
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
CEO North America
No Result
View All Result

CEO NA Magazine > Technology > Subscriptions are everywhere, and they are ruining our lives

Subscriptions are everywhere, and they are ruining our lives

in Technology
Subscriptions are everywhere, and they are ruining our lives
Share on LinkedinShare on WhatsApp

More and more of our interactions with companies don’t involve owning anything they produce, but rather “renting” goods and services through a subscription – creating annual recurring revenue. They’re starting to overwhelm us: surveys are showing that Canadians are struggling to manage recurring expenses that accumulate over time.

In the United States, the FTC recently introduced a “one-click rule,” specifying that it needs to be as easy for customers to cancel their subscriptions and memberships as it is to sign up in the first place (this is also referred to as the “click-to-cancel”). After the proposed rule was announced in March, 2023, over 16,000 comments from the public bolstered it.

This straightforward principle has already come under fire from business groups (including Disney), who are pushing back – hard. That aggression is surreal because the legislation doesn’t say that subscriptions shouldn’t exist, but instead simply takes the stance that they should be far less sticky. But companies don’t want us to be able to exit this perpetual payment pitfall.

The modern subscription trap is threefold: firstly, locking you into recurring annual or monthly payments (typically through deceptive practices); secondly, often intentionally making it unnecessarily onerous to exit that agreement; and thirdly, they can be a vehicle to inadvertently surrender other unrelated rights. Recall that Disney tried to make the claim that a subscription to Disney+ absolved the company from the damages associated with a fatal accident at their theme park or that a couple was unable to sue Uber after a serious car accident because they agreed to binding arbitration in Uber’s terms of service when they ordered takeout on UberEats.

Companies are obviously threatened that this lazy revenue model is being scrutinised by regulators. It’s worth asking how we even got here in the first place. Initially, the idea of paying incrementally to access expensive goods seemed quite promising. Subscriptions were touted as “the future of commerce,” and we were told that consumers preferred the advantages of access over the hassles of maintenance.

That model was presented with tons of possibility, surging in 2012 with subscription boxes offering razors, meal kits, and underwear. And similar concepts like car-sharing and community tool libraries have helped many people access important items and save money in the process. But there’s been a serious shift over the past decade away from outright ownership and towards perpetual, eternal micropayments where we will, as author Carol Roth has cautioned, “own nothing.”

It’s clear we are suffering from subscription fatigue. But that exhaustion may be preventing us from going beyond just shrugging off the rapacious, unwanted coils of a subscription and asking bigger questions about the trick itself, like: do we need a right to a one-time payment that protects the ability to outright own a version of a software system, like we used to when we bought it off a shelf and downloaded it through CD-ROMs or a floppy disk? When are these charges just a straight-up scam? And what is the line between an efficient business model and one that is straight-up exploitative?

Read the full article here

By VASS BEDNAR / Courtesy of The Globe and Mail

Related Posts

AI in Family Offices
Technology

AI in Family Offices

People will be ‘living and working’ on the moon in the 2030s, says space tech CEO
Technology

People will be ‘living and working’ on the moon in the 2030s, says space tech CEO

Tim Cook turned Apple into a $4 trillion juggernaut by not trying to be Steve Jobs
Technology

Tim Cook turned Apple into a $4 trillion juggernaut by not trying to be Steve Jobs

Tim Cook celebrates ‘record-breaking quarter’ for Apple
Technology

Apple withholds data in India antitrust case, watchdog sets final hearing

Starbucks launches beta app in ChatGPT to fuel new drink discovery
Technology

Starbucks launches beta app in ChatGPT to fuel new drink discovery

Antitrust probes planned for OpenAI, Nvidia and Microsoft
Technology

OpenAI touts Amazon alliance in memo, says Microsoft has ‘limited our ability’ to reach clients

Tech is doing everything right and getting left behind
Technology

Tech is doing everything right and getting left behind

Generative AI is an energy hog. Is the tech worth the environmental cost?
Technology

Analysis-Investors press Amazon, Microsoft and Google on water, power use in US data centers

Major outgoing CEOs are citing AI as a factor in their decisions to step down
Technology

Major outgoing CEOs are citing AI as a factor in their decisions to step down

Meta’s court losses spell potential trouble for AI research, consumer safety
Technology

Meta’s court losses spell potential trouble for AI research, consumer safety

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Meta shares sink 9% after Reality Lab earnings fall short
  • Core inflation rate hit 3.2% in March
  • Jerome Powell announces plans to remain on Federal Reserve board
  • How the AI boom derailed clean‑air efforts in one of America’s most polluted cities
  • The future of outplacement: What will matter most in the next 5 years

Archives

Categories

  • Art & Culture
  • Business
  • CEO Interviews
  • CEO Life
  • Editor´s Choice
  • Entrepreneur
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Highlights
  • Industry
  • Innovation
  • Issues
  • Management & Leadership
  • News
  • Opinion
  • PrimeZone
  • Printed Version
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

  • CONTACT
  • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
  • ADVERTISING
  • MEDIA KIT
  • DIRECTORY
  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Advertising –
advertising@ceo-na.com

110 Wall St.,
3rd Floor
New York, NY.
10005
USA
+1 212 432 5800

Avenida Chapultepec 480,
Floor 11
Mexico City
06700
MEXICO

  • News
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life

  • CONTACT
  • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
  • ADVERTISING
  • MEDIA KIT
  • DIRECTORY
  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Advertising –
advertising@ceo-na.com

110 Wall St.,
3rd Floor
New York, NY.
10005
USA
+1 212 432 5800

Avenida Chapultepec 480,
Floor 11
Mexico City
06700
MEXICO

CEO North America © 2024 - Sitemap

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.