Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts Government News

Judge Sues ISP for Poor Service 179

Pig Hogger writes: "According to this National Post story, Ontario small claims judge Beverley Reade is taking Rogers Cable to court, after she failed to get a credit when her Internet connection stopped working for a few days. She asks for either $5800 ($500 for breach of contract, $300 as compensation for her inconvenience & $5000 for punitive damages) OR an apology from cable mogul Ted Rogers himself (like this would ever happen...). The kicker is that, despite being hounded by a collection agency seeking the disputed amount, judge Reade keeps being getting solicited by Rogers marketroids trying to sell her high-speed internet access and cable-TV service..."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Judge Sues ISP for Poor Service

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Does that now also mean that tech support lines will have to have people who are competent or risk being sued?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Instead of going to court and causing hassle to all concerned, begin signing up new fictional people accounts every three months or however often they shut 'em down for non-payment.
  • Tat allows anywhere from zero bps up to the maximum stated throughput, yes?
  • ...that they are supposed to immediately terminate the communication, whatever it is. So you can't get cute with them in a legal way, OTHERWISE they will promptly direct you to their legal counsel. Funny thing, though...I did threaten to report the poor service I was receiving in Fremont, California to City Hall, where there are more strict rules against cable ISPs. When the guy on the phone told me that if I was threatening a lawsuit that he would hang up, I said "Nope...you won't be dealing with my lawyer, you'll be dealing with Fremont city council's..." Needless to say, problem solved rather quickly...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    ...comparing her to Erin Brockovich, the single mother who brings a chemical conglomerate to its knees...
    So, the author of this article has absolutly no knowledge of either Cinema or History?

    PG&E is a GAS AND ELECTRIC company...

    damn, ignorance is bad, but editorial stupidity is unforgiveable...
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'm in the Scarborough area and I have very few problems with Rogers. However, every two to three days I wind up having to reset the cable modem and Linksys router sometimes followed by a DHCP Release and Renew to get going. Most users may not know the various tricks to try resetting the equipment at the client side. The big question is how well do their technical support people know how to train users. One of the first questions they should be asking is what equipment are you using. Their support people never ask me this. Then again on the rare times that I call support I am usually calling in with a list of which of their servers that I can and cannot ping. If they perhaps can better document proceedures to reset client side equipment then they could probably cut down on the number of support calls. I have a technical background and can figure out most problems on my own. The average person is not going to do this. They are going straight for the phone.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    I have COGECO in Kingston Ontario. My experience is the exact opposite of yours. I've had no service for months at a time, and been expected to pay full cost for that luxury. Let me tell you about the COGECO: Whenever it rains, I loose my service. I call their "local Kingston number", which is just a goofy forward to their Burlington head support office. I spend on average 2 hours on hold, no matter when I call. Day or night, week o week-end. I ask how many people are there working the phones; usually the answer is between 6~12, never higher than 16. After 40 minutes of going through checklist type "help" with the "technical support" trained monkey, they book a service call. A dude shows up in a truck two weeks later, claims to have fixed it, and leaves. A week later, it breaks again. The modem falls into a cycle of working for two days, then not worknig for three. The support guy doesn't want to book another service call, because the guy was just there last week. "We'll credit your account..." Of course, they didn't. I don't know how you define training, but I don't define it as reading off a checklist that's just: A) Try rebooting the computer B) Check all the cables and drivers C) Reset the modem one way D) Reset the modem another way E) Delete your IE cache -> Service call if they're feeling generous The entire time I keep saying "I'm an enterprise IT tech, I know it's because the modem isn't connecting to it's network." But the greasy teenager on the other end always knows best. So why do I still have this COGECO nonsense? Because there just isn't anyone else. COGECO@Home, Rogers@Home, Shaw@Home... They all have jurisdictional monopolies... They prove the cable TV, and the Cable internet. If you dont' like it, go back to Dial-up. You could try ADSL, but it costs more than cable, and isn't as fast. The marketing guys at Bell really have their act together...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Actually Rogers are terrible. Some people never have a problem, but woe betide you if you are not one of those people. It took them FIVE weeks to get my connection working after the initial installation. Two days after the installation, I called and asked them to send a new modem (I had tested a friend's modem and it worked). A week later - and countless power cycles (Phone Support: "Sir, power the modem off and power back on, you chould be OK" Me: "The last phone support guy had me do that 20 times. I just tested a friend's modem and it works. Send me another modem please." Phone Support: "Sir, please power the modem down and power on again. Everything test out fine here." Me: "Yes. The modem is the problem." Phone support "Sir, please power cycle ---" click)
    Where was I..? Oh yeah a week later they sent a guy with NO modem. He said everything was OK.

    Repeat cycle, over and over. Finally I SNAPPED and gave the phone guy bloody hell, so TWO weeks after that they sent a guy with a new modem. Guess what?

    After that, I just lost the mail server a few times every week and totally lost service a day or two every week until I finally gave up on them.

    On the other hand I have friends in another city who've had uninterrupted service for over 2 years. Go figure.

    Anyway my point is - Rogers really don't make any effort to supply what they advertise, and this person is perfectly right to take them to court over it.

    PS, using BELL Symnpatico DSL now for a year. No interruptions, throughput 2x any I ever got from Rogers.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I'm a former SWBell (an SBC baby bell) DSL customer, and myself and others in the area have been through far worse.

    My latest scenario:

    A year ago, I moved to a location that was declared as being over 24,000 feet out from the CO, and therefore could not continue to get DSL. It took me about 3 months to get it removed from my bill (ARGH!).

    Okay, three months ago (a year after previously cancelling my service), I suddenly was billed for DSL service. How the HELL can I be billed for service that I not only do not have, but can NOT PHYSICALLY obtain?

    The first month, they credited me the amount mis-billed, and swore up and down that the DSL service was removed from my bill.

    The second month, I did in fact get the credit, but was still being billed for the non-existent DSL! I called back, was credited again, and was put on hold for 25 minutes while the rep (who previously claimed she could not get ahold of a manager at the time) spoke to a manager who said that, on the spot, they removed, and confirmed removed, the DSL service from my bill.

    A week later, I got a call from a DSL installer wanting to confirm a schedule for them to come out and install my DSL. Argh!

    This month, I recieved my bill. I had not recieved my credit for the previous month. I was charged a late fee. To add insult to injury, they were STILL FUCKING BILLING ME FOR DSL!!!

    This time, I got another credit (AGAIN!), and they claimed, once again, to have removed DSL from my services. This time, I spoke with my local billing office (as opposed to SWBell Internet Services). I asked them to specifically note on my account that SBIS was BARRED permenantly from being able to add services or bill my account. Period.

    We'll have to see.

    A relative of mine, on the other hand, has been billed for a year now for a dial up connection he does not have. SWBell has attempted to criminally extort this money from him by telling him he had to pay the entire amount of the bill (now several hundred dollars) and file a complaint. Then, if and only if it was determined to be "true", then he would be CREDITED for that massive amount. In the meantime, they have turned off his phone and DSL service multiple times. They even turned the phone off after being given a direct order by the Texas Public Utilities Commission that they were not to disconnect his service under ANY CIRCUMSTANCES WHAT-SO-EVER. Keep in mind that in most states, the phone companies do what the state PUC's say, or ELSE. It is a severe penalty when they violate an order like that.

    The latest I hear is that the PUC is about to "lower the boom" on SBC. They have warehouses full of complaints just about their DSL service.

    Here are some more little tidbits:

    -- Their phone reps have been caught red-handed giving false names over the phone (caught by verifying with their own supervisors/managers they transfered people to).

    -- Whenever you accuse SBC of capping their DSL service below their guaranteed cap of 1.5MB (which is a severe FCC violation) they suddenly become very quiet--you don't have that many people react in this manner unless they know something is going on.

    -- The same thing occurs when you accuse them of chaining multiple DSLAMS together (thereby reducing the possible bandwidth of the connected DSL users).

    Personally, I'm waiting for Birch or one of the other local phone carriers (NOT AT&T) to get rolling in town, and I'll tell SWBell to kiss my ass forever.
  • In Quebec and Ontario, for high speed access we basicly have a choice between two monopolies, the cable and telephoen monopolies. There is only one isp on cable.. and for ADSL, well, you can get another isp, excep that Bell Canada sells its isp service (inclusing the line) for less than just the line without service..

    But, in Quebec, where I live, the cable company (Videotron) sells its service for $CAN 30 .. which is $US 20.. That's for cable service... even tho it goes down quite often (lets say I see on average one hour of downtime per month.. maybe per week).. At that price, I believe I still get an excellent service... The ADSL servie is somethins liek 35$/month...

    So yes, we are stuck with monopolies, but at least they are monopolies competing very vigorously...
  • I'd say she's at least entitled to legal fees as well. Additionally, I happen to agree that punitive damages are in order. Roger's shouldn't be allowed to get away with just losing the amount they owe her. Otherwise they'll have no incentive not to treat their other customers the same way. They should face at least SOME penalty.

  • Umm.. here's what I don't understand. If you don't get the service that they want you to pay for, how can you be considered to be "in debt" to them? In debt for what? What did they give you? Seems like if they aren't providing the goods, they shouldn't get the money, right?

  • Unfortunately what the Firestone/Bridgestone case shows us is that in order to draw enough bad press to really have an effect on a large corporation, they have to kill a few dozen people.

  • I am a lawyer, but this is not legal advice. If you need legal adive, contact an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.


    This is indeed scary--this woman is hearing cases? Her actions in this suit show a fundamental lack of understanding of the law.


    Yes, this is Canada, and not a state where I have a license. Note, though, that the US is usually in the forefront of jackpot-style expansions of the law.


    Never mind whether or not you hate the ISP, or what you think is fair. This is about the law.


    There are no punitive daages on a contract. None. Zip. Nil. Just can't have them. You might get something for general damages in addition to the value of the services not delivered, but not several thousand--at most, she gets here regular rate of compensation.


    The only way to get punitive damages out of a contract is to show a fraud in getting you into the contract. To show this, you need to show that a statenmt was made with the knowledge it was untrue. This does not appear to be what she's doing, though, according to the article.


    and why did I give it up for academia???


    hawk

  • After a year and a half of a VERY broken connect and refusals time and again from rogers to send anyone to my house to repair my connect, I threatened them with a lawsuit in order to talk to someone in a higher tier in tech support. (A benign threat- I didn't have the time or money to take on this sort of thing.)

    I insinuated that they advertised that Rogers allowed you to do certain things with your cable modem, including surfing the web and playing games. However, I was told flat out by many of their techs that as long as my connect is up and they can ping it, they will do NOTHING ELSE to help me with my connect.

    When Rogers left British Columbia and Shaw moved in, a tech came to my house to switch my Lancity modem with a Terayon model (thanks to Terayon and Shaw for the non-competition monopolistic contract). Apparently the wiring inside my wall was positively rotten. It was fixed by a Shaw employee that day.

    Rogers deserves to rot for what I would call false advertising.

    As a sidenote, if anyone is going through a Shaw to Rogers switch like I did, check out my experiences [dhs.org].

    \\\ SLUDGE

  • When the guy on the phone told me that if I was threatening a lawsuit that he would hang up, I said "Nope...you won't be dealing with my lawyer, you'll be dealing with Fremont city council's..." Needless to say, problem solved rather quickly...

    I GUARANTEE your threat didn't get you any further than if you had just attempted to resolve the issue without trying to drop names.
  • My family lives under Rogers' monopoly. When both my sister and I left for university, my dad cancelled our cable TV service since noone left needed to watch TV at home.

    Rogers did not cancel our service and after my dad came back from a trip out of Canada, he found letters from Rogers threatening him and they continually called to threaten him about not paying for the service. Needless to say, he was really upset. Especially since he had paid for three months _after_ his original cancellation request. He told me each time they harassed him, it always ended up in a shouting match with whomever Rogers sent to harass him.

    The issue was never resolved. Since then, Rogers has continually called to try to solicite their services. On a few occasions, my dad decided to go ahead and subscribe only to later be called by someone working for Rogers harassing him about how he still owes them money. And then the cycle repeats...

  • That's the way it is now, but it used to be that telephone and cable TV wires on both sides of the subscriber interface (demarcation point, goes by a lot of different names) were installed by, and belonged to, the service provider, and the customer/home owner wasn't supposed to touch them, and a lot of places are still using those wires because nothing's come up to cause them to need to replace them.
  • Before Cox Cable came to Vegas, the local company Prime Cable offered cable modem access (one of the earliest in the country, if I remember). And god was their service just horrid. Luckily, the most basic modem installation was only $20. The first time they came out, the guy installed everything and nothing worked. Rather than troubleshoot, he claimed "there MUST be a problem at the street!" and told me that another tech would be out soon. A week later some guy in a rusty old van came and dug up my front yard. And then ended up running the line along a fence and the side of the house. STILL not working. Tech #3 shows up just under 2 weeks after the first and replaces the modem. Third time's the charm! Luckily, when Cox Cable came to town and bought out Prime Cable, they really focused on straightening out the problems with the modem division. Granted, it took them a while, but things have gotten much better. When I moved into the place I'm at now, I called on a Monday to order 2 digital tv boxes and a modem. The earliest appointment they had was that afternoon. And instead of doing the regular 8-12 or 1-5 time frames that Prime Cable had, they moved to 7-9,9-11,1-3,3-5,and 5-7. Two hours is a whole lot better than four, especially when the hours extend further in the day. Even better, a couple weeks ago my modem was acting up and I called the tech support around 11am. There was a tech at my door at about 1:15 and my modem was normal again by around 2. Beyond that, they recently raised the basic downstream rate to 1.5mbps from 512kbps with no additional charge (unless more than 1 IP is used-- but thats what NAT routers are for). It seems to me the folks in Vegas are pretty lucky these days (at least from my experience), compared to some of the other shithead cable companies in this country.
  • But... as a matter of ethics, no judge would get away with presiding over a case in which the defendant is the same company that they themselves once sued, particularly when it is for essentially the same reason
  • NAFTA. Remember the increasing entanglement of our laws and business practices in North America.

    This could get interesting if she wins; couldn't it be used as precedent for several aspects of customer/business/government communication interaction? Imagine having to provide x number of tech support for each 1000 customers, or metered internet access with automatic deduction for downed connection time. Interesting possibilities.

  • by HEbGb ( 6544 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @03:46PM (#131752)
    If they have not provided you with a proper degree of service, you should absolutely withold payment. In a conflict liie this, it is FAR more difficult to get money back than it is to get a bill cancelled.

    Of course, the ISP is easily within their rights to report the failure of a bill payment to a collection agency, but the burden of proof, and its enforcement, is on the shoulders of the vendor.

    Asking for a refund is not at all the way to handle this. Clearly you haven't dealt with many vendors like this before.

  • Videotron is not bad... i just got a cable modem in yesterday, and being the first one in my area to get it (it's been available for less than a week) the repeaters they had on the lines weren't 2-way yet, they brought my modem over yesterday and after the realized it wasn't working, the tech put in a call, and later that day they started changing repeaters. It wasnt until today that my connection started working, but that's prolly because they had to change the switchbox for the whole neighborhood, even taking off tv service for about 10 minutes. Anyway, after all that, my cable modem is finally up and running, and I should also mention that I never spent more than 15 minutes waiting on the phone line. Now if they would just do somehting about the 6gig download quota and the 1gig upload quota I would be really happy.
  • to do with it...IT IS IN SMALL CLAIMS COURT, there is a financial cap on damages.
  • Heh, I thought yer whole *post* was a joke, then I read the article, and she's serious about missing Survivor.

    (look of disbelief) The canucks must be pretty hard up. I've missed every episode of Survivor, ever, and I'm perfectly norm.. uhhh nevermind

  • Morally, you're correct. In the Real World(tm), being right morally sometimes doesn't get you anything but a bad credit rating. For example, under Ontario law, if something is wrong with your apartment, you can NOT, under ANY circumstances, withold rent. It doesn't matter if it's something like a window has a crack in it, or the front door swings wide open every time you fart. You are never right to withold rent, and you can be sued for the rent. There are other avenues of getting what you want, including talking to the rentalsman's office and to your lawyers, but both offices will tell you: PAY YOUR RENT, and THEN follow up. It's the same situation for the judge: yes, morally, she shouldn't have to pay for services she hasn't received, but legally, she does. Having said that, I'm sure she knows this - and hey, how badly can missing a few payments on a $50 bill reflect on your credit rating?
  • IANAL, but as far as I can recall, there is presedence already. A contract is not valid if it is not balanced, benefitting only one party.

    A company can put all kinds of disclaimers in their little print, but if these disclaimers are not reasonable, a court will dismiss them in a heartbeat.


    Yeah, basically a court can find a contract to be "unconscionable" if it is absurdly tilted towards one party or the other. Trouble is, I bet you could count on two hands the number of contracts voided by courts in the US for unconscionability in the last *century*.

    In theory, such a thing can be done, but in practice it virtually never happens, because the general presumption is that both parties understand the contract before signing it. You could try to get a contract voided that way, but believe me, you're never gonna get beyond the judge asking you why, if the contract was so awful, you signed it anyway. Unless you're retarded, insane, or otherwise demonstrably incapable of guarding your own best interests, you're going to be stuck with that contract, even if it is totally one-sided.
  • by BrookHarty ( 9119 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:24PM (#131758) Journal
    I have ordered both Cable and Phone service over the phone, they did not read me the written agreement before placing my service. This is the same as the EULA agreement about agreeing with the EULA after you open the box.
    Also the arguments about 5800 as too much, i think its too little. Her time is worth more than 500 bux for hours of lousy on-hold music.
  • File a complaint with your state communications authority. Being a monopoly most local phone companies are to some degree regulated by state and federal agencies.

    Filing a complaint with the FCC is also important, but in my experience doesn't make much of an impression.

    Another thing to keep in mind, is that you are not just losing your phone service, but you are losing your 911 emergency dialing. This is a FCC regulation and if a phone company can be shown to be negligent in this matter they can face some major fines.

    As always, this should not be considered legal advice, ie consult a lawyer. Hopefully, it points you in the correct direction though.

    Lando
  • by Sethb ( 9355 ) <bokelman@outlook.com> on Friday June 22, 2001 @05:23PM (#131760)
    I had AT&T @Home for two years before getting my new locally owned and run cable modem service in my new place.

    The level one support people are clueless, and like to blame your machine or hardware for every problem, even if you haven't changed anything, and you wake up some morning to find all three of your computers no longer connecting to the network, and you've swapped out your hub and every network cable. I am not making this up, it happened to me, and it took two and a half weeks for them to diagnose that there was a problem in the cable box outside my apartment building. One tech had come out, but didn't bother to actually TEST the line, just installed a new modem and left saying "it should work in a couple of hours".

    What I want, is for ISPs to take providing service more seriously. If you do convince them that there is an actual problem with your line or modem, @Home always schedules someone to come to your house in two weeks, not the next day, not even that week.

    Would I accept that from the phone company or the power company? Hell no! Maybe access to the internet isn't important to them, but it is important to me, as it can save me several trips to the office to fix minor glitches or help out computer-challenged users.

    Now, I understand that cable modems can go down, but for the love-of-god, have a free dial-up number locally for when it does, so that those of us who have phone modems at least have a backup that we can use for those two weeks while we wait for help. AT&T has a modem pool that their subscribers can use, FOR FIFTY CENTS PER MINUTE. That's adding insult to injury.

    What is the average cluelss user supposed to do for two weeks without access? You can generate an awful lot of negative eBay feedback for unpaid auctions and unsent goods if you can't get to your e-mail for two weeks...

    I know that if you really NEED Internet access 24/7, you should be using something more expensive than a $30/month cable modem, but it's time that @Home actually showed some concern for the experience of the end users...
    ---
  • And yet apparently the local phone system worked, (if people are bitching you out on the phone) despite the weather. There's a lesson in there somewhere.
    The reason being that people not competent enough to work for the phone company work for the cable company.

    --
    Knowledge is, in every country, the surest basis of public happiness.

  • That is what they want you to do. Read the contract and assume that every clause is legitimate and enforceable.

    In reality, many contracts include unenforceable language that is knowingly included for its intimidation value. They know that it would get laughed out of court, but they know that most people are not lawyers and will assume the language is valid.

    You need to consult with a lawyer if you want to know what the contract actually means.

  • Rogers sent a collection agency after her over a disputed bill. That agency threatened to ruin her credit rating. She certainly is entitled to damages, and $5000 isn't excessive.

    I think she'll win.
  • It might set an interested precedent if the judge wins. As another poster mentioned, there's probably one of the usual "we disclaim any liability for it not working" sort of clauses somewhere in the agreement. (While the agreement for signing up with the cable company may not have been an actual "click-through" thing, the "it's not our fault if it doesn't work" is a common feature of such things).

    If the judge wins, should commercial software developers start worrying about the lack of protection that these clauses in the licenses?


    ---
  • I got my cable modem installed right away, no delay. When it fried itself a few weeks ago, they came by the next day (I called tech at 11pm), and replaced it for free.

    Sometimes, there does exist good service.
  • I've always wondered-- do churches carry Act of God insurance?

    Now, naturally, if the ISP loses a peer or upstream provider, or your cable gets cut, there's gonna be some connectivity problems, but it should be fixed promptly, and other problems should be fixed immediately. My cablemodem died two nights back, and Roadrunner sent a tech out (after standard tech support call) at 10:30pm to figure out the problem, and fixed it. In the past, they've always either fixed it immediately or given me credit for the day.

    It's reasonable to assume your ISP will provide you with Internet service, funky EULAs stating "we won't provide you with service, even though our ads explicitly promise it" be damned.
  • by SimplyCosmic ( 15296 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:12PM (#131767) Homepage
    Compared to the usual multi-million dollar suits that we see for outlandishly stupid behavior on the part of customers, this is nothing.

    Add to that the actual threats they made towards her credit rating while she was attempting to get that bank loan, plus the usual obnoxious behavior that collection firms can sometimes get into, a complete lack of respect by the service provider about any of it's customers, makes me think that she's asking for too little in punitive damages to get the company to rethink this kind of behavior.

    It's exactly concerns like this and other horror stories that make me mistrust most cable ISP's.

  • Rogers is notorious for being way over subscribed. I know several people in Toronto who have had lousy service and non-existant support form this company. Fortunately for me, I'm not in an area serviced by Rogers, and for that I am glad. From what I've seen when I've tried to help the above people, they use @Home's DHCP servers - which keep blowing up. Their backbone seems to be at or near capacity all the time. They put way to many subscribers on the same cable segment - which really degrades performance. And they don't want to fix these problems - capital expendature.

    Myself, I subcribe via Cogeco [cgocable.net], who was about the same when I first started with them. However, they have a clue - when thier backbone started melting, they quadrupled it's bandwidth. When @Home kept blowing up it's DHCP server, they put thier own in Burlington, Ontario. When wait times on service calls regularily went over 45 minutes, they hired new staff - they even trained them before they went on Hell desk duty. I have only been off-line for a total of one hour in the last 4 months. All in all, I am extremely satisfied with Cogeco.

    The difference here is that Cogeco is in this for the long haul - they want to keep thier on-line customers happy, so they keep thier on-line customers in the face of any competition. Rogers doesn't give a flying fuck as long as you pay your bill.

  • by Soko ( 17987 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @03:19PM (#131769) Homepage
    Cable companies in Canada are granted local monopolies for cable access. Rogers certainly behaves like it has a monopoly - "Oh, just pay your bill, we'll fix it soon."

    This is just someone who is hitting back since there's relatively no alternative. I myself couldn't go back to dialup, and Sympatico is not much better for service. As well, I'm fairly certain thet there's not a CO on or within 7 or 8 Km ( about 4.4 to 5.0 miles) of Pelee Island - IOW it's out of DSL range.

    (OT: There is also somewhat misleading advertising from Sympatico. They advertise "No sharing, always fast" - about 760Kb to the CO - but what they don't tell you is that you and the other 200 people in the CO are sharing a single T1 to the Internet. Since Cable is usually @ 1.5Mb, it's about the same in the end, isn't it?)

    I won't duplicate an earlier rant [slashdot.org], but let's just say that the trouble with Rogers (and Bell Canada - owners of the Sympatico service) is one of being a little too focused on the bottom line and not thier customers. Having a monoploy [microsoft.com] seems to do that [slashdot.org] to a company, IMHO.
  • The Judge probably decided to do that after Rogers sent a *collection agency* to collect supposedly owed fees for a service that didn't work.
  • .. It's a consumer service. The consumer has a right to demand that things work.

    Also, recall that she is not seeking punitive damanges because of her internet service, but because of Roger's actions as a company. She is not asking for punitive damages because her net access didn't work, she's suing for damanges because of how they acted *after* she cancelled her service.
  • The breach of contract part is about the contract/aup/whatever you want to call it.
    However, an AUP that disclaims punitive damanges would be, i'd think, limited to damages related to internet access or loss thereof, directly. So you can't sue them when they crash and you lose access to e-trade for an hour and lose money.. that's not their fault. You cannot, however, disclaim all punitive measures against the company itself for whatever reason...
    She's suing because of their actions as a company, not because of lost internet access.
  • No.
    Punitive is supposed to punish the offender, more than pay the plaintiff.
    The judge asked for much smaller amounts for 'damages'
  • Yes.
    I hope to receive such a notice some day.

    My response will be 'We understand what you are asking, but fail to see how you can compel us to do this. If you feel we are stealing your product, please file charges, otherwise, please stop harassing us. We do not have the time to deal with you.'

  • by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @03:01PM (#131775)
    The bulk of the money she's asking for is in punitive damanges because of Rogers behavior; the behavior of their collection agents, and there refusal to do proper business.
    This is not simply about internet downtime.

  • by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @03:30PM (#131776)
    Right, which the Judge did, remember? She didn't get the service she was expecting, right off the bat, so she cancelled her service.

    They then both a) refused to give her the refund she said she was getting and b) sent her to a collections agency.

    Her point is twofold.
    One, that she agreed to sign up because it would be on all the time, and there was technical support. Once she was signed up, she found that it didn't work all the time, and the support was a joke. In any normal business dealing, that's a fundamental breach of the implied contract of sale. The service they sold here didn't work as specified, so she cancelled it, and refused to pay them any money.
    Then their collection agent went a bit too far with her too, acting quite threatening, talking about ruining her credit rating, etc.

    She's going after them for selling a bunk product, not for losing her internet access. She hasn't paid them any money, and is instead taking them to court over it.

    Had they simply said 'we're sorry you didn't like our service, we hope you come back some day' all woudl ahve been well. This is about their actions, not her loss of access.
  • I was on Telocity for about 9 months. Then my local provider, Rythm's decided to quit providing DSL to residential users. So Telocity informed me that in 2 weeks, my service would be terminated, and they were sorry. So I quickly signed back up to my local cable provider, and unhooked my dsl modem.
    That was in Feb.
    I just found out that I've been still getting billed since then. Thank god it wasn't still automatically getting charged to my CC.
    Dipshits.

  • This can get real interesting if the license is way out of line with the marketing. If there is a reasonable claim that one or the other is fraudulent, ...hehe...
  • Interesting. In Canada, officers of the court (lawyers, judges) and their families are exempt from jury duty. Now, I don't know if they are also prevented from it.
  • I don't think that "A main router went down, and we're too cheap to invest in failover." counts as an Act of God.

    Yes, floods, etc count, but I don't see anything like that mentioned by Rogers.

    As a disclaimer, I work for an ISP too - so I can sympathize with you about things that are really out of your control - but equipment failure doesn't cut it.
  • by schon ( 31600 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:20PM (#131781)
    This could be interesting..

    According to the cableco, they can't be held liable because their AUP says so..

    This sound suspiciously like a "click-through" license.. if the Judge wins, it could spark a HUGE blow against such licenses - finally (at least in Canada) bringing them under legal scrutiny..

    I'd be interested in seeing how this plays out.. a legal precident could be in the makings...
  • Rogers is a HUGE media company, with fingers in cable, cellular, pagers, TV & radio stations, magazines, video rental, baseball team etc etc etc. Their profit in 2000 was almost one billion dollars.
  • Does anyone else think this sounds like something Judge Judy would pull?

    --

  • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:35PM (#131784)
    "Acts of God" usually refers to specific events beyond a company's control. In the words of my DB professor, it's "Fire, Floods and Insurrection." (And Tornados, Hurricanes, heavy unseasonable snowfalls, war, et al.)

    It does NOT include something a company could reasonable foresee. E.g., building a switch in a flood plain.

    Very few people aren't willing to cut a company some slack after a bona fide Act of God. But many companies try to use this to justify Acts of Gomer. (Think Gomer Pyle, Cable Guy, and you know what I mean.) It's Gomer Pyle, CEO, who didn't staff the help line and caused hour-long waits on help-calls, not God. It's Gomer Pyle, CEO, who made some decisions that caused the network connection to be routinely dropped.
  • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:45PM (#131785)
    Yeah, read the contract. It promised timely, 24-hour support. Not hours on hold, only to finally reach a clerkoid with no answers or authority.

    Besides, taken to its logical extreme (something many cable providers attempt), that clause would make it perfectly legal for them to provide *no* service whatsoever. That flies in the face of common sense - contracts are supposed to be mutual guarantees of exchanges of value. Paying $40/month while the cable company does absolutely nothing doesn't make sense, and any court would throw it out.

    That's all the judge is asking in this case - a determination that the company can't routinely drop that connection without reaching the point where no reasonable person would consider it worth the hassle. There has to be *some* limit, and since it's not stated in the contract that's something that can (and will be) determined by a judge or jury.

    There's also issues regarding business and collection practices. From what the article said, I agree with the judge that the company's behavior crossed the line of acceptable behavior. Promising a future credit, for an unknown amount at an unknown time, is nothing but a clear "fuck off" to the customer.

    (IANAL, but can read.)
  • I was forced to talk to my children. I rang my mother up and asked her what to do but all I got was a bunch of babble about "raising" my children. I think my mother has been reading one too many self help books.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • In London Ontario she doesn't have any other cable isp choices, but she can choose to go with Bell sympatico's DSL service. Also there are other ISPs that offer DSL service. There is also Look ( RF modem ), and Satelite.

    Yes in canada, the cable and phone monopolies must also allow other isps access to their infrasture.

    However due to the cost of implementation, nobody has so far gone that route with Cable (although in the huronia region as small isp has begun to look into offer high speed cable as well) , only dsl isps have done this.
  • by joq ( 63625 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:13PM (#131789) Homepage Journal
    Some of the things are typical of most peoples complaints regarding ISPs. So here's what I think of it all. Firstly when it comes to justice, a Judge in a court (think about this deeply for a second) is likely to pull in a win. Call it intuition, but if you were a cop you would be less likely to give your `brother cop` a ticket. On to the complaint.

    Judge Reade's lawsuit says Rogers advertising promised quick and easy access to the Internet, plus "an enhanced multimedia experience and technical support 24 hours a day."

    Odd how this is the first I've ever heard of anyone complaint about this ISP via way of a lawsuit. I wonder how many others have either complained, in comparison with how many users they have, etc. People always complain for whatever reason about anything, it's human nature.


    Instead, she says, the system rarely worked.

    Some days, she couldn't connect to the Internet at all. At other times, she says the connection would shut down when she or her teenaged children were using it.


    As stated how many people faced this same problem with this provider? A bit disturbing to see this article which seems to contain shaky grounds. So she doesn't want money but an apology? If it's a matter of morals, why waste the peoples time and money with this bs, just move along to another provider, unless she has a vendetta which is not written going on against the provider.

    Now when I see things like it would shut down when she and her kids were using it, how the hell does she know it wasn't her own, or her kids negligence that was causing it? For this I refer to "Diary of an AOL'er [antioffline.com]", a funny ass story, but oh so true for some people.
  • You don't mean four, you mean "at least 5".
  • by outlier ( 64928 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:40PM (#131791)
    According to the article, The company says its written agreement with Internet subscribers offers no warranty against "uninterrupted use or operation of the equipment or services."

    I think I'll go into the ISP business. I'll sell customers a 100gigabit access for $19.95 per month. When they complain that they ain't getting any service I'll point out the Rogers Clause in their contract, and try to upgrade them to my premiere package (1 zillion terabits for the low, low price of $39.95 pre month).

  • The consumer has a right to demand that things work.

    The consumer also has a right to take their business elsewhere.
  • Considering the suit was filed last month, on an infraction committed four months ago, I should say not.. Even if he devoted 100% of his practice to it, it's only, say $80K, in fees. And this fucker is a personal accident shark, one of those fellows who advertises on TV (I've seen his adverts)... An ambulance chaser, per se..

    While I agree they do work hard, as a whole, I object to this on principle.. He's a money grubbing moron who hopes he's got his star to the easy life.

  • If I lived within this judge's jurisdiction and was having any trouble whatsoever with the cable company. I would be running to her small claims court and filing as many suits as I could against the cable company.
  • This story is very lackluster on details, and does a great job of making Judge Reade look like a hero fighting a big company. That may be the case, but the facts sure don't back it up. It is made clear that Rogers has harassed her, and she should sue for that. But from the rest of the facts, this looks more like a typical frivolous lawsuit.

    Unbiased Article: "Their protagonist is a former litigator..." PROTAGONIST?

    She is suing for $5800: $500 for breach of contract, $300 for compensation, and $5000 for punitive damages. Lets examine this:

    • $300 for compensation - $300 won't make up for the time she spends, the harassment, and legal fees.
    • $500 for breach of contract - Rogers claims their contract makes no guarantee of service or compensation. Nice contract. So basically, they don't even guarantee that they do anything for the fee. That makes it hard to say they breached it.
    • $5000 punitive damages - Rogers contract exempts them from punitive damages. That's why she has to go for breach of contract - else the $5000, which is the real heart of this matter, would be thrown out.

    What are the damages? "...Reade says her kids have agreed to testify in court about the deprivation of missing television -- particularly this year's Survivor show -- and its effect on their lives..." Many Slashdotters would probably PAY money to not be mass marketed. These people consider it a $5000 damage!

  • AT&T has a modem pool that their subscribers can use, FOR FIFTY CENTS PER MINUTE. That's adding insult to injury

    This is why I went with the Sympatico ADSL service Bell Canada offers. sure I never get more than 50kB/s and it's a dynamic IP but the customer service makes up for it.

    Case in point, I was having trouble with intermittant connections with the modem. Called the toll free number, got live person within 3 minutes and they were helpful going thorugh the proper steps to double check that everything was fine, and when I told them I was using Linux, I was imediatly written up for a check on the network line, tech support said "You must know what you're doing on your end then"

    Next day got a call from network support to do some checks with the modem to test the line, when nothing came up that way they sent a guy out THAT DAY to get me a new modem.

    compared to the 2 weeks it took to just get rogers out to my old place to hook the stuff up, the intermittant service and the hangups when I told them I ran Linux (with the phrase "Sorry we don't support that OS") I am extremely happy with my connection, even if it's slower.
  • I am not alone with this problem. Everyone who lives in Hacienda Heights and Rowland Heights, CA are having similar problems:

    1) Very slow speed, especially during peak hours (i.e. analog modem speed during peak hours). I was told that there are only six T1 lines in this city.

    2) Too many cable modem outages.

    3) Horrible technical support (nothing unusual for any companies).

    4) None of can get DSL because we're too far. IDSL, satellite Internet, etc. are too expensive and slow (i.e. gaming).

    5) The problems are getting worse.

    6) Adelphia@Home is still adding new subscribers. My cable friends and I recently got flyers and postcards.

    I was told Adelphia is going to discontinue @Home and switch subscribers to its PowerLink ISP service. I doubt that will help a lot.

    Some interesting links with my city's cable modem problems:

    My city complaints [dslreports.com]... Hacienda Heights, CA 91745

    Speed Test Results [dslreports.com] (type in 91745 for zip code).

    Adelphia Forum [dslreports.com]: A few posts related to my city and Rowland Heights.

    Some results [apu.edu] from my traceroutes, pings, etc.

  • by CaptainCarrot ( 84625 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:23PM (#131803)
    Most places in the US, cable companies are local monopolies and are not required at this time to make their infrastructure available to any outside ISPs. Is it the same in Canada? Could Judge Reade have simply gone to another broadband provider, or was Rogers the only possible source?

    This suit really isn't as frivolous as some here are making it out to be. Regardless of what the contract says, there are certain minimum warranties required by law, and certainly a company should be held accountable to a degree for the claims it makes about itself in its advertising. Presumably she knows the law in this situation and believes she has a good case.

    Clearly, Rogers could have avoided this simply by providing the support they promised they would in their marketing literature. Even if they lose, they're getting off cheap compared to the cost of actually hiring enough support operators.

  • Have you read the story of Bob Kolody vs. Coca-Cola [guerrillanews.com]?

  • well i've heard both good and bad things about Rogers@Home, but personally i've had absolutely no problems with them. perhaps that's just because i live in downtown Toronto: i have yet to hear a complaint about Rogers' downtown service from anybody i know. of course my parents in London have had constant problems so who knows? i do know (from my parents' experience) that if you bitch enough about the outages they'll refund some of your money.

    at any rate, Rogers@Home isn't completely useless across the board, but they definitely have their problem areas. they're also considerably better than Bell Sympatico from my experience (but they're also hit & miss).

    - j

  • I agree, this is more about the press than the money. I think an acceptable outcome would be for her to win, but be awarded only the value of the credit she was supposed to get on her bill. The principle of the thing, that is, not having to pay for service that you did not recieve, is the real point. I understand that it may really have been due to issues beyond Rogers Cable's control, but that doesn't make it right to charge for services not recieved.

    Personally, I wish I'd had the time and energy to sue my old DSL ISP in small claims court to get back the the two months of charges for service they failed to provide. Hours and hours on the phone with techs with no clue, lies about "widespread outages," and much bullshit. Finally gave up and switched to a wonderful new ISP with techs who really know their stuff. I'll be interested to see how this turns out.


    ---

  • I think an acceptable outcome would be for her to win, but be awarded only the value of the credit she was supposed to get on her bill.
    What do you suppose would happen if courts generally ruled like that? It would become standard practice to refuse to meet one's contractual obligations, knowing that even if the other party sues and wins one is no worse off than before. This is why courts award punitive damages.
  • And yet apparently the local phone system worked, (if people are bitching you out on the phone) despite the weather. There's a lesson in there somewhere.
  • by digitalhermit ( 113459 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:23PM (#131817) Homepage
    Telocity has been something of a nightmare for the past 3 months. I've opened several tickets but have had no resolution yet. Their billing department wouldn't credit the full amount of downtime because they'd seen the closed ticket and time had elapsed before the next ticket was opened. Here's the script that I use to check availability:
    #!/bin/bash STATUS=`ping -c 2 -q 216.227.80.37 2>/dev/null`
    CODE=$?

    NOW=`date`
    if [ $CODE -gt 0 ]; then
    echo $NOW DOWN >> ~/temp/status
    else
    echo $NOW UP >> ~/temp/status
    fi

    They were supposed to call my Noon today but haven't. The next step is to file complaints with the local PSC and the FCC.
  • ..that they are supposed to immediately terminate the communication, whatever it is

    I guess they get threatened a lot then.

    When I ran Zeta Internet [zeta.org.au] we used to get the occasional customer call and threaten to sue us for something or other. In every case it was a baseless threat, made simply because the customer was frustrated. We would ignore the threat and just do our best to fix up their problem, whatever it was.

    The funniest one we ever got was the guy who threatened to sue us for 60 billion dollars because he didn't understand how to do FTP. We setup his website and while awaiting delegation of the domain sent an automated form letter with instructions for uploading the web pages which said something like:

    If registration or delegation of this domain is incomplete then the name
    www.whatever can only be used from within the Zeta network, so ...
    And the guy didn't understand what if/then means and went positively apeshit.

    So anyway I can understand their policy. 99% of these threats aren't serious, but the ISP doesn't want to stuff up the 1% which actually are. This policy stops the baseless ones in their tracks, because the really want technical support, not the legal department.

  • $5000 is too much punative damages in a case where a company could easily be shown to be in breach of contract and yet a guy that started smoking knowing that it was dangerous, smoked his whole life knowing that it was killing him (he admitted this in court) and ended up with cancer and some other complications and sued a tobacco company and got awarded like 3.5 billion dollars in punative damages and people seemed to say "yes the tobacco companies deserved that" God do I love contradictions in popular thought.

    I think that $5000 is resonable to make a company go "hey we did something wrong" and yet not actually damage the company in any serious way. This is a .com type company though maybe $5000 is more than thier profit this year :) Really though $5000 is almost nothing to a resonable business and I just hope its enough to get the attention of the provider and let them know that when they promise a level of service they must live up to the promise or compensate users for the loss. If nothing else they need to get a customer support staff that is competant, caring and fast.

  • by rgmoore ( 133276 ) <glandauer@charter.net> on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:17PM (#131828) Homepage
    Now only if more bad stuff would happen to judges...

    Surprisingly, this actually works. There has been significant jury duty reform here in California, and the leading proponent is the Chief Justice of the state Supreme Court. He was called for jury duty and actually wound up serving on a jury. He was so pissed off with the way he was treated that he decided that poor treatment of prospective jurors was a serious threat to the judicial system and started leading the charge for reform. Not all of the things that he's advocated (specifically decent jury duty pay) have been implemented, but it has made a big difference.

  • Nope.

    AFAIK, everywhere else in Canada is like here (Guelph, Ontario, in my case). There is one cable internet provider here - Rogers@home. If you don't like it (ie. if you don't like paying through the nose, and having so-so service) then either go with Bell Sympatico (not bad from what I hear, but also $$), or rot with the rest of the modem-using losers. Which I will probably be soon, as I cannot afford $50/month just for a decent 'net connection... :-(

  • Are explicitly covered in most ISP ToS, when houston is flooded, and our upstream provider (WorldCom) loses something like 1000 DS-3's, a few of which happen to be ours, and all of our customers running out of Bryan/College Station are without service, yea, it sucks, but its not our fault, and there isn't much we can do about, I'm still fairly sure that Customer Service went back across the board and credited all the accounts in the area, even though our ToS didn't call for it. What I hate are the people who bitch me out on the phone when I explain the situation, people DIED during that flood, and all some jack-off's down there cared about was the fact that they couldn't get on Pogo! [pogo.com]

  • Actually click-trhough licenses have been attacked in 1st Circuit. There is a class action in Mass against AOL. AOL tried to have it moved based on click-through but lost.

    Even so, each contract has a question of good faith and reasonability applied to it. There are also consumer protection acts that apply. Also, there are an implied warranty.

  • Road runner depends on the area. In Austin, RR was great. I had my linux box running for months at a time w/o a glitch. In another area, it drops every few hours. They have tried to blame everything for it, except martian spores.

  • by rmst ( 157328 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:12PM (#131840)
    'She also says her kids have agreed to testify in court about the deprivation of missing television -- particularly this year's Survivor show -- and its effect on their lives.'

    Yes, I can see it now

    Please, tell the court how you were affected by Rogers's Actions...
    I started reading. (through sobs) I got though an entire book! YOU BASTARDS!
  • I can see the transcript now:

    Witness: ...and then I had to find out who won Survivor from a newspaper! [Witness breaks down sobbing]
    Plaintiff's Attorney: Yes, I'm sorry...it must have been very hard. INow you know I don't want to do this, but I need you to describe for the court, in your own words, what kind of depraved, foul-smelling, leech-like --
    Defense Attorney: Objection, your honour! My client is not leech-like!
    Judge: Overruled.
    Plaintiff's Attorney: Thank you, your honour. As I was saying -- leech-like, hideous, indescribable monster you think could possibly deprive you of the wholesome, innocent joys of childhood by taking away television.

  • by phoxix ( 161744 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:08PM (#131846)
    Now only if more bad stuff would happen to judges...

    maybe they could see what we (the massive) consumers have to put with

    and so maybe we could get court decisions voted *our* way for once ...

    Sunny Dubey

  • Sorry, you are wrong. When you "subscribe" to a service you are entering into a contract. The company agrees to provide a service and you agree to pay for that service. Unless the contract has a clause that states "you must still pay even if we do not provide the service" she had every right not to pay her bill. At least in the U.S. there are a ton of consumer protection Rogers was the first to breach the contract so she had no obligation to pay. Here is a link explaining contract law [freeadvice.com]. Under your theory, I could lease you a house, have the house blown up, kick you out on the street and you would still have to pay me rent.

  • Go Girl! err... your honor.
  • I know that if you really NEED Internet access 24/7, you should be using something more expensive than a $30/month cable modem

    That philosophy runs contrary to contract law. Price is irrelevant when a contract binds the relationship -- if you really NEED Internet access 24/7, and a company advertises their access as 24/7 then you can reasonably expect them to fulfill that, regardless of price.
  • by Papa Legba ( 192550 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:34PM (#131858)
    interesting, but not suprising, that she is a small claims judge. my experience (from when I once litigated against an old landlord) is that the small claims judges are actually more in touch with the people. They will help you out and make suggestions in court. They are used to big companies mauling the little guy, consequentially they don't put up with it.

    This is why one of the first actions a company will take if you small claims court them is to have it moved to circuit court (a "higher" level court) rules of evidence are harder and the judges more "impartial" (lawyer friendly, not layman friendly)

    Hopefully this will start to break us free from the cable company monopolies, my area allows only one, I would love to see equal access enforced like it is for long distance carriers. (at least in the US). Maybe then they will stop this bait and switch crap they like to play with bandwidth, 120K the first month, then 90K , then 60K etc...

    On a final note I would also like to say, that must be one of the most shagable judges I have ever seen...

  • by delfstrom ( 205488 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:32PM (#131865)
    For other Rogers@Home customers, here's a few resources that you can use to take them to small claims court:
    • a book [fedpubs.com] on how to use the Ontario Small Claims Court system
    • a link [cbc.ca] to some useful information, including a PDF document [gov.on.ca] on the Small Claims system
    Is that enough? :)

    Of course, if there are enough people that have been pissed off by Rogers, we could go for a huge class-action lawsuit, but I have a feeling that a grassroots small-claims onslaught will be much more effective, and put more cash back into your pocket if you've been affected.

  • Rogers has been supplying horrendous internet service here in Ontario for years. Connection is down frequently for peak periods, email inacessable for days, downloads sometimes so slow that dialup is faster. It was only a matter if time someone took Rogers to court over such (lack of) service.

    Hope she wins

  • by bat'ka makhno ( 207538 ) on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:37PM (#131868)
    The judge's expectations of receiving a refund for downtimes on her cable line are not out of line at all. If Rogers were smart, they'd do what Verizon does on their (rather shitty) DSL lines - a free day of service for every hour of downtime. I've managed to get several weeks of free service so far without having to put any pressure whatsoever on the Verizon support reps. They won't bring it up, but their guidelines must state that if a customer asks about that particular policy, the rep must go ahead with crediting the account with the requested hours. They probably do check their logs to see if your claim of a down router - biggest problem, especially on the weekends - is true, so don't push it too far. :)

    --
    Violence is necessary, it is as American as cherry pie.
    H. Rap Brown
  • "Now only if more bad stuff would happen to judges...
    maybe they could see what we (the massive) consumers have to put with
    and so maybe we could get court decisions voted *our* way for once "

    Yeah, really... Wouldn't it be great if some judge was threatened by the DMCA cartel?

    But then few dare to mess with judges though, they are pretty much the ultimate "sacred cow" of politics. Few even dare to openly criticize them, even though it's apparent that there are many out there disgracing the bench (cough) (cough) Kaplan..(cough)

    Thing is, this cable company is fucked unless they do what is requested... They clearly are in breach of contract. And you can bet a judge will get a sympathetic ear of another judge...
  • "It might set an interested precedent if the judge wins. As another poster mentioned, there's probably one of the usual "we disclaim any liability for it not working" sort of clauses somewhere in the agreement. (While the agreement for signing up with the cable company may not have been an actual "click-through" thing, the "it's not our fault if it doesn't work" is a common feature of such things)"

    I seriously doubt that in such a case, that kind of click thru agreement is legal to begin with.

    No commercial contract can overrule civil or criminal law, and it's against the law in most places to take money for services you do not deliver. IMO, such agreements are there more to make the consumer feel like "We're the PHONE company, we dont' fucking care, and you can't do SHIT about it!".

    Most likely, this cable company is advertising their internet service, and the claims they make in those ads ALONE makes them liable to provide the service. I doubt they have a "we take no responsibility but will happily charge you if because of our negligence, it doesn't work" disclaimer in their flashy copy.

    I've been lucky with RoadRunner so far. The service was connected promptly, the speed is excellent (my download speed has more to do with how fast the server on the OTHER end is!), and other than a couple of brief weather-related outages, has been reliable as hell.

  • Apparently this needs to be cleared up still...

    Unless the laws are so totally different in all parts of North America, the basic law is simple: you can't just not pay a bill. Here's a great analogy from my past: I was renting an apartment from a company that didn't have the building up to code. Sure, I could have just refused to pay my rent until the problem was fixed, right? Wrong. Had I done that, my landlord would have every right to charge me late fees, declare my account delinquent, whathave you. Simply put, it wasn't my right to deny payment, because it had not been a finding of law that stated I didn't need to make payment. It is up to a court judge (note: not just a judge who's acting as a citizen as in this case) to decide the fate.

    Faced with this, I am in a hard place. I don't want to pay my bill because that makes me feel like I'm saying it's all okay--and things certainly are not okay. So what am I to do? Simple. I file suit. Another option would be (if I intend to file suit) to send a formal complaint to the clerk of courts with a check for the disputed amount. The court will keep hold of the funds until things are sorted out. The clerk will also notify the defendant of the funds that have been sent in as well as the complaint. This will effectively "lock" the account so that it does not become delinquent.

    I really wish people would better understand that this is a very important point: one cannot go without paying off a debt. It doesn't matter how right you think you are; and it doesn't matter if the other party isn't living up to its end of the contract. If you wish to show that the defendant hasn't lived up to its portion of the contract, the absolute worst thing you can do is break the contract yourself. It is imperative that if you are going to make a claim that you haven't made a single breach of the contract. It's almost always the plantiff's burden to show proof, and by breaking the contract by withholding payment you have started off on the wrong foot.

    Last comment: if you are ever thinking about withholding payment, call your lawyer first. Don't get yourself screwed by doing something that's just going to hurt you. The courts here simply throw out cases where the plantiff withheld payment. This is because it looks like the plantiff is trying to get away with free products or services. You can either pay the bill and then file suit for that money back (and yes, that's a great idea at times) or send the money to the clerk of courts. But doing neither of those things will cause bad things.

  • by clark625 ( 308380 ) <clark625 AT yahoo DOT com> on Friday June 22, 2001 @03:41PM (#131887) Homepage

    Flame aside, of course I read the article. And believe it or not, Rogers Cable had every right to call in the collection agency. Here's why:

    First, when I "subscribe" to anything, I am agreeing to pay my bill in full every time a bill is due. Sure, I may have objections. I may even say that I don't want to pay it. But that doesn't pay the bill, and I'm not released from being required to pay in the legal sense.

    Second, the lawsuit hadn't been filed. That means there wasn't a court injunction that temporarily "locked" the account until the mess could be sorted out. Had the judge simply filed the suit immediately after not paying the bill in full, her account would not have been sent to a collections agency. The burden in on the plaintiff here.

    The proper thing would have been to pay the bill in full if the suit hadn't been filed. The judge could have then proceeded with the civil suit and asked for a refund of the money. Not paying the bill and not getting the account locked in a legal way forced her account into collections. One can't just go around not paying bills--one's credit rating is based on payment only; not on whether you're right or wrong for denying payment.

  • by clark625 ( 308380 ) <clark625 AT yahoo DOT com> on Friday June 22, 2001 @02:13PM (#131888) Homepage

    This is obviously excessive. There is no way this judge, nor anyone else, could get that sum of money from any ISP. It just isn't going to happen.

    Now, what the judge is trying to do is make a point. She doesn't want Roger's Cable to get away without major negative press. She probably doesn't care much about whether she wins or loses, and I can't blame her. Sometimes finding a way to tell potential consumers to stay away is worth a loss in court.

  • Rogers deserves to rot for what I would call false advertising

    I couldn't agree more. Ever since Shaw came to BC their cable service, and in particular my broadband service, has been top-notch. I actually talked to a tech support guy who knew what Linux was... what a change of pace from Rogers.

    Ryan T. Sammartino

  • She also says her kids have agreed to testify in court about the deprivation of missing television -- particularly this year's Survivor show -- and its effect on their lives.

    Puuull-eeze. Pray tell, what effect would that be? YOU cancelled your television service. The issue was the cable internet service, not TV.
    As for breech of contract etc, waiting for hours is standard practice for @home tech support, and they can't wait to get your ass off the phone. I would not classify it as breach of contract, i would call it their standard service policy, along with every other ISP's (see below). Waiting is part and parcel of the game lady. If you want a tech at your beckon call, 24/7, be prepared to pony up the dosh to pay for it, cuz your paltry $40/month don't cut it.

    And now for my OT tantrum about @home:
    Those know-nothings at Shaw/Rogers make $17.00/hr to basically leave you on hold, and tell you to reboot your computer, or run winipcfg. GAWD! They have none of the shit-work of a normal ISP and yet my company [uniserve.com] (may they rot in hell) that pays me $9.50/hr just layed off our ENTIRE office.
    Phew, I *really* needed to get that off my chest.

  • Well, like the mod line said, "flamebait." OK, I'll bite. :)

    "Unbiased Article: "Their protagonist is a former litigator..." PROTAGONIST?"

    Legal-ese. Calling her the protagonist is the same as calling her the plaintiff. That, and the idea is that Rogers "antagonized" her first.

    "$300 for compensation - $300 won't make up for the time she spends, the harassment, and legal fees."

    Assuming that she's not representing herself. To be a judge, you first have to be a lawyer. Also, renting out a few vacation cottages usually doesn't require you to be there 9-5.

    "$500 for breach of contract - Rogers claims their contract makes no guarantee of service or compensation. Nice contract. So basically, they don't even guarantee that they do anything for the fee. That makes it hard to say they breached it."

    Then it depends on if that particular clause is legal. If such a clause is against the law, then it doesn't matter what the paperwork says.

    If "anything goes" in contracts, then builders could get out of lawsuits for collapsing buildings, and organized crime wouldn't be illegal ("But your honor, the contract said that if he fell behind on his payments I could break his kneecaps, blow up his house, shoot his family...")

    "$5000 punitive damages - Rogers contract exempts them from punitive damages. That's why she has to go for breach of contract - else the $5000, which is the real heart of this matter, would be thrown out."

    Again, it depends if Rogers is legally allowed to back out of said punitive damages.

    "Many Slashdotters would probably PAY money to not be mass marketed. These people consider it a $5000 damage!"

    Check out the by-line/motto when you come in here next time: News for Nerds. The fact that these damned "reality" TV shows suck doesn't prevent them from becoming cultural icons. And following social dogma can be a big thing, especially in... say... high school. That, and I'd also lump in the collection nazis and telemarketing demons into those punitive damages. Hell, considering the fact that this is Canadian play money we're talking about, I'd ask for double for that kind of crap. :)

    Which reminds me: "Compensation" covers only losses that come directly from Rogers' breach-of-contract (the actual lost connections). "Damages" is everything else not directly covered by the contract, but outside problems caused by Rogers' action/inaction (no "Survivor," missed customers because of website problems, harassing phone calls, making her drag them to court to begin with, etc...)

    However, IANAL.

  • IANAL, but as far as I can recall, there is presedence already. A contract is not valid if it is not balanced, benefitting only one party.

    A company can put all kinds of disclaimers in their little print, but if these disclaimers are not reasonable, a court will dismiss them in a heartbeat. The purpose of these disclaimers and one-sided contracts is to save money. Most consumers actually believe this bullshit and think they have no rights, thus saving a lot of money for the offending service provider.

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

Working...