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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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Gene Kearns wrote in
: I just tried to cancel my XM subscription via the net and you can't do it.... here's the pseudo-American email I got in response.... "Thank you for contacting XM Satellite Radio. We got your email requesting to cancel. It is so unfortunate that you would like to cancel your services, however for you to cancel your service with XM please call 1-800-998-7900 between the hours of 6 am and 2 am, Monday through Saturday and Sunday 8 am through 8 pm Eastern Standard Time. An XM Satellite Radio Listener Care phone representative will be happy to assist you. Thank you, [Indian/Pakistani Name Deleted] XM's Listener Care Email Team " Just like my gripe with Vonage, this company has a special fast-track number for signing up, but you want out, you are going to sit on hold for some serious time before you get a human voice. If you can sign up, alter account details, initialize the radio, and pay via Internet, why not terminate service the same way......? The reason? I just installed the new SIR-GM1 receiver in the truck... and I like Sirius' programming better.... If anybody has a late model GM product and factory installed satellite radio.... this is a *very* simple black box conversion from XM to Sirius... works exactly the same as before, keeping all of the factory features. Why not send them an email, or snail mail cancelling and then just stop paying. Assuming you have it on credit card, just tell the credit card company they are no longer authorized to charge you. The credit card company has to listen you. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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Remember, though.... time is on THEIR side.... and they'd love to
ignore your snail mail.... Send it certified. Once it's received and you have your receipt, call the CC company. My father in-law did that with AOL many moons back, and while AOL threatened, a copy of the receipt shut them up. They claimed that it may not have been read...doesn't matter, they received it. --Mike "Gene Kearns" wrote in message ... On Sat, 09 Sep 2006 19:47:31 GMT, akheel penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: Why not send them an email, or snail mail cancelling and then just stop paying. Assuming you have it on credit card, just tell the credit card company they are no longer authorized to charge you. The credit card company has to listen you. Good answer... and I have used this with great effect with assholes like PayPal. However, they finally did answer the phone.... and I did get disconnect from them at the hip.... they we one or two notches above vongage on the food chain... Remember, though.... time is on THEIR side.... and they'd love to ignore your snail mail.... -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Why not send them an email, or snail mail cancelling and then just stop
paying. Assuming you have it on credit card, just tell the credit card company they are no longer authorized to charge you. The credit card company has to listen you. Actually, they don't. Read your credit card agreement very carefully with regard to contractual obligations on cancels/returns. Gene Kearns wrote: Good answer... and I have used this with great effect with assholes like PayPal. However, they finally did answer the phone.... and I did get disconnect from them at the hip.... they we one or two notches above vongage on the food chain... Remember, though.... time is on THEIR side.... and they'd love to ignore your snail mail.... For many of the bottom-feeders among the credit card business, time is also on their side. They make more money by keeping you on the hook. That said, I have generally had pretty good cooperation with credit card companies avoiding and/or stopping this kind of rip-off. At one point, my ISP was bought up by Earthlink and converted to a credit card billing. About a month later I got a different (faster & cheaper) ISP and tried to cancel. Snail mail, email, messages left at their 800# which would not under any circumstances connect you to a living human being, etc etc. After a couple of months I asked the credit card company to cancel, and after some hesitating, they did. If all else fails, you can always cancel the credit card account that it's billed to, assuming you can get them to agree on what date you have a zero balance. Lots of ways companies conspire to keep consumers on the hook these days. DSK |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 10 Sep 2006 16:31:50 -0400, DSK wrote:
If all else fails, you can always cancel the credit card account that it's billed to, assuming you can get them to agree on what date you have a zero balance. Lots of ways companies conspire to keep consumers on the hook these days. Send the company a registered letter, return receipt requested, and send a copy to your credit card customer service department. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() DSK wrote: Why not send them an email, or snail mail cancelling and then just stop paying. Assuming you have it on credit card, just tell the credit card company they are no longer authorized to charge you. The credit card company has to listen you. Actually, they don't. Read your credit card agreement very carefully with regard to contractual obligations on cancels/returns. Gene Kearns wrote: Good answer... and I have used this with great effect with assholes like PayPal. However, they finally did answer the phone.... and I did get disconnect from them at the hip.... they we one or two notches above vongage on the food chain... Remember, though.... time is on THEIR side.... and they'd love to ignore your snail mail.... For many of the bottom-feeders among the credit card business, time is also on their side. They make more money by keeping you on the hook. That said, I have generally had pretty good cooperation with credit card companies avoiding and/or stopping this kind of rip-off. At one point, my ISP was bought up by Earthlink and converted to a credit card billing. About a month later I got a different (faster & cheaper) ISP and tried to cancel. Snail mail, email, messages left at their 800# which would not under any circumstances connect you to a living human being, etc etc. After a couple of months I asked the credit card company to cancel, and after some hesitating, they did. If all else fails, you can always cancel the credit card account that it's billed to, assuming you can get them to agree on what date you have a zero balance. Lots of ways companies conspire to keep consumers on the hook these days. DSK I've heard of people calling the CC company and reporting their card "stolen" a new card is issued, and AOL , XM, Vonnage, or whoever is dropped because you have to give permission to have their bills paid by the CC co. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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Wayne.B wrote:
Send the company a registered letter, return receipt requested, and send a copy to your credit card customer service department. It would certainly be interesting to see them try to wiggle their way around this one in court! Personally, I think companies who practice policies that are either 'pushing the envelope' or are outright fraud, such as denying customers the ability to cut off service, slow-paying accounts, 'service fees' levied for no service given, etc etc, should be outed with big publicity campaigns .... they should be driven out of business. DSK |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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If all else fails, you can always cancel the credit card
account that it's billed to, assuming you can get them to agree on what date you have a zero balance. Lots of ways companies conspire to keep consumers on the hook these days. wrote: I've heard of people calling the CC company and reporting their card "stolen" a new card is issued, and AOL , XM, Vonnage, or whoever is dropped because you have to give permission to have their bills paid by the CC co. Good idea! I didn't think of that! DSK |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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That just results in them considering the bill unpaid. That doesn't
turn them off. DSK wrote: If all else fails, you can always cancel the credit card account that it's billed to, assuming you can get them to agree on what date you have a zero balance. Lots of ways companies conspire to keep consumers on the hook these days. wrote: I've heard of people calling the CC company and reporting their card "stolen" a new card is issued, and AOL , XM, Vonnage, or whoever is dropped because you have to give permission to have their bills paid by the CC co. Good idea! I didn't think of that! DSK |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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DSK wrote in
: Why not send them an email, or snail mail cancelling and then just stop paying. Assuming you have it on credit card, just tell the credit card company they are no longer authorized to charge you. The credit card company has to listen you. Actually, they don't. Read your credit card agreement very carefully with regard to contractual obligations on cancels/returns. Agree, except, it's not a cancellation or return. It's withdrawing permission for a future charge for a service not yet received. No permission, no charge allowed. |
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