A lot of companies were working with honey to have them make sure people didn’t get the best offer. So they knew exactly what was going on.
A lot of companies were working with honey to have them make sure people didn’t get the best offer. So they knew exactly what was going on.
You can always just transfer it yourself. Withdraw it from a physical location (assuming there is one) for that bank and deposit it in your own hsa account.
That’s kind of like a looter invoking the ‘finders keepers’ defense. Last click isn’t a law.
So their excuse would be everyone else is doing it? Good luck with that.
Disney backed off because they feared it wouldn’t be ruled applicable and didn’t want to create that precedent.
The class is people that use referral codes as an income source, so not the users that would have been subject to the terms of service.
I wouldn’t count on Tesla getting anything working properly to market any time soon.
Their complaint was that honey inserted their affiliate cookie even when they didn’t find a coupon code for you. I doubt they knew the full extent of the scam.
Plus, we don’t know what was in their contract with honey. They could still be subject to a non-disparagement clause.
The “replaceable CEO” is part of the reason the system is broken in the first place.
That’s okay, because there is a law about interfering with someone else’s contacted agreement.