Jump to content

Fake lifetime license

From Consumer Rights Wiki

This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.

A moderator needs to check the page before this notice can be removed. Visit the noticeboard or the #appeals channel in either Zulip or Discord to request removal.
More info ▼

An article may be flagged as a stub when it is missing major elements needed to make it useful to a reader. You can help by adding missing sections, verifiable sources, relevant company policies and communications, etc. to make the article more complete.

Fake lifetime license is a marketing scam in which customers are misled and/or blatantly lied to, with respect to the expiration date of a license they acquired.

This is distinct from post-purchase EULA modification, as the license was never changed, it was always fake.

How it works

[edit | edit source]

Companies may deceptively advertise a product or service as having a "lifetime" or "forever" license, so that when a customer legally gets a license (typically by paying money), the customer is allowed to use the product/service for a limited period of time.

Sometimes, the "lifetime" refers to the warranty of the product, not the lifetime of the customer.

Companies do this to artificially increase profits, such as switching to a subscription model for recurring revenue.[1]

Why it is a problem

[edit | edit source]

Most, if not all, customers expect the license to last for as long as humanly possible. When the expectation breaks, they need to change their plans

Examples

[edit | edit source]

References

[edit | edit source]
  1. Grigonis, Hillary (2022-05-15). "After a record-breaking year, Adobe officially axes the old Creative Suite". Digital Trends.