Brendan Burgess
Founder
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After you finish booking a ticket online with Ryanair, Irish Rail or Ticketmaster, you might get a page saying something like
By pressing the “Click here” or “Continue” button you are brought to a website for a completely separate company. Many people realise this and go no further. But many don’t realise this and end up giving this company the authority to take €12 a month from their credit card.
Many people are caught out by this in Ireland
Conor Pope in the Irish Times has investigated this and reports on many people finding these payments:
This week’s consumer concern relates to mystery payments to Completesave.ie
and
More readers contact us about Complete Savings
And the Ray Darcy Show
Is Complete Savings/Save a con or a scam - Ray Darcy Show
They have been catching people out in the UK for years.
http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.php?t=3622877&page=5
But why do so many people get fooled by this?
Some people have insisted that they never gave their bank account information to Complete Savings but that Irish Rail or Ryanair must have passed on the information. Irish Rail does not actually pass on any banking information.
Complete Savings defends itself by saying that people must sign up on their website and proactively give them their bank account information.
But the problem is that many customers do not realise that they have moved on to a different website.
An anti-trust investigation in Italy found that 62% of those who subscribed, cancelled claiming that they had not signed up consciously
Just recently The Italian Anti-trust office fined Ryanair €420,000 for its participation in the scheme. http://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2014...dreams/897017/ (Use Google translate to read it in English. ) The anti-trust office discovered that 62% of those who joined the scheme left the scheme claiming that they had not signed up consciously.
Why do companies like Ryanair and Irish Rail participate in this scheme?
The company behind it is Webloyalty. They and their “partner companies” settled a $10m class action in the United States back in 2009 for an earlier version of the scheme.
Complete Savings is owned by Affinion the company which owns LoyaltyBuild, the company in Ennis which had its systems hacked and 500,000 of their customers had their credit card details compromised.
This is known as post-transaction marketing which is described by Wikipedia as
Irish Rail and Ryanair should be obliged to “clearly and conspicuously” tell their customers that they are being passed onto another website. They do not do this at present. Hitting a button saying “continue” does not suggest that the person is leaving the site.
Do not click on this special offer.Special Offer
Your purchase is complete. Click here to claim your £10 cash back incentive on your next Ticketmaster purchase. Continue
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By pressing the “Click here” or “Continue” button you are brought to a website for a completely separate company. Many people realise this and go no further. But many don’t realise this and end up giving this company the authority to take €12 a month from their credit card.
Many people are caught out by this in Ireland
Conor Pope in the Irish Times has investigated this and reports on many people finding these payments:
This week’s consumer concern relates to mystery payments to Completesave.ie
and
More readers contact us about Complete Savings
And the Ray Darcy Show
Is Complete Savings/Save a con or a scam - Ray Darcy Show
They have been catching people out in the UK for years.
http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.php?t=3622877&page=5
But why do so many people get fooled by this?
Some people have insisted that they never gave their bank account information to Complete Savings but that Irish Rail or Ryanair must have passed on the information. Irish Rail does not actually pass on any banking information.
Complete Savings defends itself by saying that people must sign up on their website and proactively give them their bank account information.
But the problem is that many customers do not realise that they have moved on to a different website.
An anti-trust investigation in Italy found that 62% of those who subscribed, cancelled claiming that they had not signed up consciously
Just recently The Italian Anti-trust office fined Ryanair €420,000 for its participation in the scheme. http://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2014...dreams/897017/ (Use Google translate to read it in English. ) The anti-trust office discovered that 62% of those who joined the scheme left the scheme claiming that they had not signed up consciously.
Why do companies like Ryanair and Irish Rail participate in this scheme?
The company behind it is Webloyalty. They and their “partner companies” settled a $10m class action in the United States back in 2009 for an earlier version of the scheme.
Complete Savings is owned by Affinion the company which owns LoyaltyBuild, the company in Ennis which had its systems hacked and 500,000 of their customers had their credit card details compromised.
This is known as post-transaction marketing which is described by Wikipedia as
In 2010, an [broken link removed] was introduced to so that “ the post-transaction third party seller has clearly and conspicuously disclosed to the consumer all material terms of the transaction” .Post-transaction marketing is a deceptive marketing practice used by many companies, which have then been subject to investigation, charges from state attorneys general, and class action lawsuits.
According to a United States Senate staff report, this practice presents "highly aggressive sales tactics [which] charge millions of American consumers for services the consumers do not want and do not understand they have purchased." It reports that consumers involuntarily spent 1.4 billion USD due to these practices, 792 million USD of that paid to the third-party sites which presented services paid for by post-transaction marketing. The report concluded that such marketing practices "exploit consumers' expectations about the online 'checkout' process." It stated that their "Misleading 'Yes' and 'Continue' buttons cause consumers to reasonably think they are completing the original transaction, rather than entering into a new, ongoing financial relationship with a membership club."
Irish Rail and Ryanair should be obliged to “clearly and conspicuously” tell their customers that they are being passed onto another website. They do not do this at present. Hitting a button saying “continue” does not suggest that the person is leaving the site.