VitalSource "Lifetime" false advertising

VitalSource "Lifetime" Access Controversy is in reference to a practice by VitalSource, a large digital textbook & course material provider for college educational markets in the United States, whereby they market some digital products as having "lifetime" access; while defining this term as a limited 5-year period.[3]

Screenshot of vitalsource' product page for a calculus book
Screenshot of vitalsource' product page for a calculus book as of 2025-02-18 [1] - Notice that there is noplace that a user can go to read that the license is not a lifetime license. The only item that links to a disclosure page is a "details" link next to "This is a digital license"
Screenshot of vitalsource' "details" page [1] that is clickable from the bottom of the product page for a calculus book as of 2025-02-18
Screenshot of vitalsource' "details" page [2] that is clickable from the bottom of the product page for a calculus book as of 2025-02-18 - In the middle of the page it mentions two important points.

Background edit

VitalSource operates as a significant provider of digital educational materials, serving students and educational institutions. The company offers various access durations for their digital products, including what they term "lifetime" access.

Definition and Implementation edit

According to VitalSource's documentation, they define "lifetime" access as follows:[4]

  • Five years of online platform access
  • Ability to download content to supported devices during this period
  • Support limited to device compatibility at time of download

This definition appears in their California Digital Goods Disclosure documentation, published December 18, 2024, in response to AB 2426 compliance requirements with the new law.[5]

Overarching problem edit

This practice is a perfect demonstrator of the key issue in modern digital goods ownership:

Redefining Common Terms edit

  • The term "lifetime" is commonly understood to mean the entire life of either the purchaser or the product
  • VitalSource's use of the term to mean a fixed 5-year period is a departure from traditional consumer understanding of the word lifetime

License vs. Ownership edit

  • Products marketed with "lifetime" access remain under licensing restrictions
  • Access can be revoked or limited based on platform support & device compatibility
  • Downloads are contingent on maintaining "supported device" status

Regulatory Response edit

California's AB 2426[6], effective January 1, 2025, addresses this type of false advertising by requiring companies to:[5]

  • Explicitly disclose when digital goods are licensed rather than owned
  • Clearly communicate access limitations & conditions
  • Obtain affirmative acknowledgment from consumers regarding license terms

Current Status edit

As of January 2025, VitalSource has updated their disclosure documentation but continues to use the term "lifetime" in their marketing, with the 5-year definition disclosed in their terms of service and support documentation.[4] Even though they have complied with the regulation, consumers still must dig further to learn that what is marketed as "lifetime" is anything but.

References edit

Loading editor…

Slow connection?