Here’s some more things we found on the Web about complaints and actions taken against WebLoyalty along with links to the various sources.
Remember, they cannot scam you without the help and support of either unknowing or uncaring co-scammers, the organizations that pass along your credit card information on their Web sites. You could avoid doing business with them.
There are twelve organizations named below, more on the websites that are linked. We’ll dig out some of the latest updates on who they are.
(You would think the US Justice Department, the FBI or The FTC would have started investigations on the basis of possible criminal activity. The federal RICCO statute provides remedies for victims of conspiratorial intentional conduct, doesn’t it?
From what we’ve seen and heard on the Web there are thousands of very upset victims of their practices and this sure acts like a duck to us. You know the old adage: “If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck and looks like a duck, it probably…”)
Search Results: webloyalty
You searched for: webloyalty:
Approximately 31 Reports Found
Showing 1May 14, 2007
Annoying WebLoyalty scamTom Smith
“I noticed a $7 charge on a MasterCard I never use because I hate Bank of America so much (another story). It turns out I am another victim of the WLI Reservations Rewards scam.
WebLoyalty apparently gets your email address when you buy something online, and then sends you some emails. If you don’t say no, they sign you up for a monthly fee… certain vendors, such as batteries.com, 1-800-flowers and quite a few others…. . It’s completely fraudulent, of course. …. In any event, it looks like this class action law firm is on the case. I hope they grind the miscreants under their litigious heels.”“Here is some more information on WebLoyalty. They say they only sign people up through the small print in those rebate coupons you can fill out. But I never fill those out, and if I did, I would not use an old email address. If you google “webloyalty scam”, you can see similar complaints from other users…”
Class-Action Lawsuit Unfolding in Boston Against Webloyalty, Fandango, Priceline, and Various Web Retailers Alleges Widespread “Coupon Click Fraud”
Seth Shulman 12/19/07
Updated and corrected, December 21, 2007. For details on the revisions, click here.
“Such is the scenario outlined in hundreds of pages of court documents filed in a sweeping class-action lawsuit against Norwalk, CT-based Webloyalty.com and online partners that include Fandango.com, Priceline.com, justflowers.com, and others that is slowly working its way to trial in the Federal District Court of Massachusetts in Boston….”
www.lawyersandsettlements.com/case/webloyalty.html
Webloyalty.com
San Diego - A class action lawsuit has been filed against the online marketing services company alleging fraud. The lawsuit claims online customers of Fandango.com, Priceline.com, Movietickets.com, Petco.com, FTD.com and Staples.com were victims of an alleged Internet scheme in which their credit cards were charged a monthly fee for a “discount club” membership they had never requested.


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