• @[email protected]
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    471 year ago

    That’s great! Deceptive pricing is so annoying. First time I had to rent a U-Haul, I quickly learned it does not cost $19.95. Not even close.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Did you pay to rent pads today to nit break your shit? Well they aren’t in the truck, so all well. Sure we will take that off your bill wink wink.

        Enjoy arguing with us for the money we said we would refund after doing a crazy stressful move!

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      All the vacation rental places are appalling. Cleaning few. Pool few. Resort fee. Service fee. Processing fee.

      Restaurants are starting on the cash grab a few years back, mostly the ones owned by private equity firms. Mandatory service fee couched as a gratuity, which it most often isn’t, so the guest and the servers get fucked.

  • Hildegarde
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    321 year ago

    This law does not ban hidden fees. There are plenty of hidden fees that this law does nothing about.

    This law makes it illegal to advertise a price that doesn’t account for included fees. If a concert ticket is $40 with a $20 “service” fee, this law would require the tickets to be listed as $60 tickets. This law does not require taxes to be included in advertised prices, sales tax is added after the advertised price.

    This law only prohibits misleading advertising of pricing, it however does not require disclosure of pricing.

    The biggest source of hidden fees is the medical billing. Healthcare costs are nearly all hidden fees because healthcare providers rarely disclose prices in advance. This bill does nothing about that, because if a price is not advertised, this bill does not effect it, and this bill does not require disclosure of pricing in advance.

    This bill is an improvement. This bill will reduce misrepresentation of pricing, but it does not actually ban hidden fees outright.

    • Rouxibeau
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      111 year ago

      What about pricing like at my local Kroger store where in the list 99 cents with digital coupon and a QR code and then teeny teeny tiny text that says $3.99 regular price.

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      If I am a small business and I advertise one price and sell it for another. It’s called bait and switch and it’s illegal. If you’re a big company, they have to write special rules for you I guess.

      • Hildegarde
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        1 year ago

        Edit: I misremembered the text, “This practice, like other forms of bait and switch advertising, is prohibited by existing statutes” This law will probably make enforcement easier because the law is now more specific.

        Under California law it’s not a bait and switch to advertise a base price before fees. That’s why they passed this law. The text of the bill mentions the fact that this sort of pricing did not violate California’s bait and switch laws prior to its introduction.

  • iAmTheTot
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    81 year ago

    Does this mean stores will list prices with tax included? >_>

    • JasSmith
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      101 year ago

      It’s so crazy they don’t have to do that in America. Advertised prices should include all fees and taxes.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I’m guessing it might be because tax rates vary so wildly in the US. Every state has their own percentage of state taxes, and then many counties and cities have their own specific tax rate on top of that.

        A company might sell a product nationwide, and it’s easier for them to do national advertising that their product is $100 + local taxes than it is for them to make hundreds upon hundreds of different local ads with a precise dollar amount.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          Sales tax varies per county in many places so I don’t see advertising including tax in the price being a thing any time soon here.

        • Hildegarde
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          1 year ago

          Why should the laws be specifically designed to make things easier for advertisers to the detriment of everyone else?

            • Hildegarde
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              21 year ago

              Allowing advertisers to avoid accounting for tax regions in their advertising absolutly is.

        • JasSmith
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          01 year ago

          I’ve no doubt it’s easier for companies, but I don’t really care about making advertising easier for them. I prefer to make life easier for consumers. Regional taxes and fees and levies aren’t unique to America. How they handle this in other countries is either regional advertising or normalising the price nationally and potentially eating a loss in some high tax areas. The price can also settle a little higher in some regions if the product has low elasticity of demand. Either way, it gives consumers much more information up front.

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    I hope this will make it clear how much people actually pay on their retirement accounts. Far too many people I talk to don’t realize that they are paying an “expense ratio” on their investment funds.