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| ![]() Attention Legal: Is X Or Twitter Now Stealing From Users? Decide:It appears that X Corp (formerly Twitter) may be engaging in systematic deceptive billing practices, in violation of federal and state consumer-protection laws. These alleged practices include blocking users from deactivating their account: :
X Corp's current billing practices raise urgent legal concerns. Users are being suspended without warning, given no explanation, and then trapped in an automated system that continues billing them for months—while blocking every path to cancel or reach a real human being. Legal professionals should examine this pattern of omitted warnings, deceptive billing sequences, and obstruction of consumer rights under federal and state consumer-protection laws. Key Facts: Subscribers to X Premium had their account suspended without notice or reason. Despite losing all access to paid features, billing continued month after month. This altered sequence—service suspended but payments ongoing—violates the basic principle that no charge should occur without service. The user received no email alert, no suspension explanation, and no opportunity to deactivate or appeal. Every attempt to contact support failed: emails bounced, automated replies led to nowhere, and no live representative ever responded. There is no working "cancel subscription" This user experience amounts to a closed loop—suspension without cause, ongoing billing without consent, and silence where customer service should exist. The lack of human interaction transforms an ordinary billing issue into a deliberate barrier preventing consumers from exiting. Such conduct undermines fairness in commerce and may violate the Federal Trade Commission Act, which prohibits unfair or deceptive business practices. Read more: https://worldclassmedia.com/ Why It Matters: The omission of warnings, absence of human response, and reversal of the normal billing sequence suggest a system intentionally designed to extract money from inaccessible accounts. Continuing to charge for suspended services while blocking cancellation may also constitute wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. §1343 when false or misleading information is transmitted electronically for monetary gain. Millions of users may be affected, making this a potential class-action issue. Demands to X Corp:
Final Note: Consumers deserve warnings, explanations, and human support—not recurring charges for services they can't use or cancel. Attorneys and regulators must act now to stop the billing, fix the silence, and protect every user caught in this system. End
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