The Federal Trade Commission is effectively arguing that Amazon’s Prime service was a Trojan Horse, a seemingly wonderful gift that concealed a hidden cost of deception and frustration. A federal trial has now begun to determine if this metaphor holds true.
The “gift,” according to the government’s narrative, was the promise of free shipping and other benefits, often presented as a free trial at checkout. The “hidden cost,” however, was an unwanted subscription that was difficult to cancel. The “dark patterns” used at checkout were the means by which the horse was brought inside the city gates.
Once inside, the true nature of the trap was revealed when a customer tried to cancel. They were not met with a simple exit but with the “Iliad” maze, the army hidden inside the horse. This, the FTC argues, was a calculated betrayal of the consumer’s trust.
This framing of the case is a powerful narrative tool that the FTC will likely use to persuade the jury. It turns a complex case about user interface design into a simple and relatable story about a deceptive gift.
Amazon is rejecting this narrative entirely. The company’s defense is that Prime was and is a genuine gift of value, with all costs and terms clearly disclosed. Its lawyers will argue that the Trojan Horse story is a dramatic fiction created by the government to vilify a successful and customer-friendly service.