Coupons.com: Clip All of Our Coupons, And We’ll Sue You
Coupons.com files a lawsuit to stop a coupon app from automatically downloading all of its digital coupons to users’ grocery loyalty cards.
Coupons.com files a lawsuit to stop a coupon app from automatically downloading all of its digital coupons to users’ grocery loyalty cards.
From new printable coupon sites and savings apps, to industry efforts to crack down on fraud, these were the top coupon news stories of 2014.
A three-year legal dispute over a little-noticed coupon security feature finally ends, in Coupons.com’s favor.
Impressionable investors are shocked to learn that printable coupons are popular, so they suddenly start buying stock in Coupons.com.
Facebook announces new rules that forbid brands from forcing you to “like” their page in exchange for a coupon.
Investors raise questions about Coupons.com’s business model, after a weak earnings report causes its stock price to tumble.
Coupons.com rakes in $168 million with its IPO, then watches as its stock price nearly doubles on the first day of trading.
As Coupons.com plans to go public, the company reveals that it has never actually been profitable.
Coupons.com reportedly plans to go public next year, offering investors a chance to buy a stake in the company.
The buying and selling of manufacturer’s coupons has become a hot topic lately, after eBay’s recent move to impose new restrictions on the practice (even though it appears those restrictions are not being vigorously enforced just yet). But eBay won’t say whether it made the decision on its own, or under duress. A couple of years ago, there was an[Read More…]