California Offers Cellular Bill of Rights 239
JeremyALogan writes "The Feature has an article about The California Public Utility Commission's approval of the first cellular customer Bill of Rights in the US. The Bill enables consumers to cancel their wireless contracts within 30 days of signing on. It also forces carriers to clearly state their rates as well as critical contract terms in normal size print on their websites (no more fine print). Companies will no longer be able to lump "recovery fees" in with taxes or other government fees on bills." You can imagine the joy with which the cellular companies have meet this prospect. Court challenges will be ensuing soon.
Mixed Feelings (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, I've got to agree with the Governator, if for different reasons. I'm not sure if this is within the power of the commission that did it, for whatever benefit. This kind of power creep is exactly the kind of thing citizens should oppose.
But then again, there is no way that bought and paid for state government would ever pass such consumer protection.
Overall, I'd call it good with reservations.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems the Golden State has wrecked its economy by going too far with some socialistic ideals in the recent past, and now everybody is skeptical of this "do-gooder" government even if the particular idea is a good one.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Uh... 1978 isn't that recent, and making it illegal for property tax revenues to keep up with inflation is hardly socialistic.
The 1978 tax revolt was inspired in large part by the fact that the California government had a large surplus of revenues. So this is a bad thing we're not allowed to do anymore. Therefore, when the dot-com boom made us temporarily flush, we had to spend all the mon
*sputter* (Score:2, Insightful)
wrecked its economy by going too far with some socialistic ideals!?!?!?
The California *I* live in was wrecked due to horrifically [pbs.org] ill-advised [citizen.org] energy [about.com] deregulation [opensecrets.org].
Damn those "socialists" and their free market!
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm in the process of getting a cell phone for the first time (I've been a college student who enjoys being unreachable) and am also to a big city. I'm trying to order a phone, have it delivered to me, but have it activated with the big city area code and so on. I ordered from a1wireless.com, but they couldn't verify my address. That's odd, because the USPS can, the electric company can, the cable company can, and the bank can. The guy I spoke with about this was a pain in the ass so I told him to cancel the order. He said that it would be done, but I have yet to receive any email from the company that the order was cancelled. I half expect to be billed for a phone that I never receive.
So I shopped around and found a completely different company. Different website, different deals, different name, different "sales pitch" regarding their phones. So I gave them a shot and ordered a phone. This was about 3 hours after I placed the first order. Here's the really sleazy part..
I was unhappy with the customer support at the first company and I wanted to take my business to one of their rivals. I thought that I had done so.. but my second order number is about 300 higher than my first one, ie the order number at one company was (fake) 423501 and my second order number with a "rival" company was 423811. This could be a coincidence, but I strongly suspect that I'll be dealing with the same bad customer support on Tuesday.
It is a sleazy industry. They must make more money by scamming their customers than providing the advertised service. My girlfriend's provider (SunCom) refuses to provide an itemized bill. They just send her a total and expect her to pay it - or pay the ~$150 early cancellation fee. I called SunCom myself and very politely did everything I could to get an itemized bill. After 30 minutes, the woman told me, "After the first bill has been sent to the customer, it contains proprietary information on our computers and therefore we cannot print an itemized bill and send it out, so sorry." I'm not a dope, I don't believe that nonsense, but the fact is that I could get blood from a stone before I could get an itemized bill from SunCom.
If some government somewhere wants to regulate these assholes and enforce a little truth in advertising, I'm all for it. A free market doesn't work well when there's an industrial scam going on, and that's what the cell phone providers have.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Informative)
I have never worked with SunCom, but there are several legitamite reasons they may not send an itemized bill. (FYI, I've been working in telecom billing a while now).
1. Their system cannot do it. Some telecom billing systems use an external rating/pricing engine to compute charges, and then forward the final (summarized) charges to the billing system for print/mail/track. The actual billing system may have limitations that prevent it from having all the actual calls (I just got through an implementation using one of those, and the result is that the paper bill cannot have detail). Is detail available on the Web? (that is the usual alternative)
2. Wireless is highly competative, and everyone wants to keep their cost down. Every page of print adds cost (both in paper and postage). Some companies that do this offer an option to pay a bit extra to receive the full detail, giving most consumers a lower price by forgoing this (again, check the Web for detail).
3. SunCom may not actually be a wireless provider (as in owning the network), but a reseller or an MVNO [mobilein.com]. MVNO's have much lighter systems infrastructure which may leave them incapable for a full detailed bill.
I know its easy to hate the phone company, and usually they deserve it, but billing is one of those things that is terribly important and often screwed up, often in spite of efforts by the carrier.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Informative)
I hate replying to my own message, but I just checked SunCom's Web site, and under the FAQ for Billing [suncom.com], it says you can get a detailed bill for $2/month. Instead of having all customers pay the extra even if they don't want detail, just the ones that want it pay.
They do seem to require that even if you only want to view online. That probably tells you they cannot seperate what appears online from what gets printed (they must be using a their invoice system for Web presentment).
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Find me a company that sucks and I'll provide you with "legitimate" reasons of why they suck. If their system is not up to snuff, then it's their responsibility to change it. I don't see what's the use in classifying their incompetency as legitimate.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
legitamite reasons they may not send an itemized bill.
While those all explain why they can't, none opf those are legitimate reasons not to. They are legitimate in the sense that 'When I signed up, I had no money, and still don't' is a legitimate reason why I'm not paying my bill.
Itemized billing is a normal expectation. Any company that procvides a service that costs based on usage is expected to detail the usage being billed for. If they can't manage that, they'd better switch to a flat monthly bill.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:3, Insightful)
SunCom is mediocre even beyond your itemized billing struggle. I hope your girlfriend can actually cancel her plan when that time comes without getting bills for the next several months. Also, their phone displays were very vague about subtle variants of "in network"...oh boy, did I appreciate that $160 bill! Do they still do TDMA only? I wonder if being part of AT&T is another liability for them. I couldn't find a decent TDMA/Palm combo phone to save my life; everyone else is CDMA/GSM.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
But maybe I missunderstood you?
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:5, Insightful)
The PUC has juristiction over many critical systems such as power and (land) phone. They also have juristiction to regulate television cable (which is *not* a critical service). Cell phone service seems much more critical then cable.
I'm always frustrated that somehow these existing laws somehow don't apply to the cell phone companies as well. Imagine if you went to Wal-mart to purchase a Television because there's a 10% off sale, and when you get to the checkout stand the cashier starts applying a bunch of additional fees.
If I go to a regular store to purchase anything, the store is required to disclose fees up front, must accept any faulty products within a certain period od time. You can't do that with a cell phone.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Informative)
Cable is regulated because it is a licensed monopoly (it least it used to be). With the advent of "overbuilders" such as RCN [rcn.com] and satellite TV such as DirecTV [directv.com] and Dish Network [dishnetwork.com], perhaps cable should be deregulated. You do make the very valid point that cable is far from a critical service, so let the free market work its magic.
I'm always frustrated that somehow these existing laws somehow don't apply to the cell phone companies as well.
The problem is that these are often considered to be national services, putting them out of reach in some ways for state PUC/PSC. This is a similar argument made in support of VOIP. The FCC, obviously, has jurisdiction. Let's say I live in one state, on the state line, so my mobile service is coming from another state. Who has jurisdiction?
With that said, the PUC is applying many things to mobile carriers. They have been required to support 911 (they didn't used to be). Mobile carriers are looking more and more like traditional carriers, and they can expect to get the same regulatory treatment in the future.
If I go to a regular store to purchase anything, the store is required to disclose fees up front
Thats not entirely accurate. As someone who travels alot, let me tell you, taxes and what they apply to are not clear until you check out. Take the example of a newspaper: in some places its taxed, others not; if it is, the tax rates are different. I can usually just pull out a dollar for a WSJ, but not always. Taxes, fees, and surcharges are generally not disclosed in any industry until time or sale or invoicing (also see: buying a car, closing a mortgage, buying a plane ticket).
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:3, Interesting)
Regardless of how small the "dish" is, many apartment buildings prohibit installation of satellite TV. If they allow it, usually they've contracted with a particular company not of your choosing (in our building, we can get DirecTV if we want, or go with regular cable). There's still no way to choose a different cable company except by moving to another area.
Therefore, ma
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
As for markets forcing change, with so few entities, all content providers (satellite and cable) look very much alike. Not until the bar to entry is lowered will the invisible hand force change.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Taxes and fees are not the same thing. (Score:3, Insightful)
What about airline fuel surcharges? Security fees? They are not quoted as part of the fare, appear along with other Tax, Fees, and Surcharges, and go directly to the airline.
I'm not defending the practice, because I do believe it is deceptive. I'm only pointing out that it is not onl
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:3, Insightful)
anyone want to put money down that the number of cellphone companies that are going to pack up and leave CA at any number greater than 0? Its not a bet i woudl take.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
anyone want to put money down that the number of cellphone companies that are going to pack up and leave CA at any number greater than 0? Its not a bet i woudl take.
They would obviously not leave such a large market. But would they continue "voluntary compliance" programs? There are several of those, such as port
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Currently, NONE of the major carriers operate out of California (Here's [latimes.com] a more detailed article). Furthermore, these regulations don't affect operations, they affect how you treat consumers... so they don't particularly have an effect on the cost of operating out of California, only the cost of selling service here. So
Not a power creep. (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, I've got to agree with the Governator, if for different reasons. I'm not sure if this is within the power of the commission that did it, for whatever benefit. This kind of power creep is exactly the kind of thing citizens should oppose.
Yeah, but currently the power creep is from the cell phone companies. These restrictions look more like lemon laws than anything.
Ask yourself this: What if you bought a cell with a contract that said it had essential coverage, and it didn't (as often cell companies do)? What if you got crappy reception at your own home even though it clearly says that you are clearly in the footprint? What could you do?
The answer? NOTHING FOR A YEAR. Buy another contract and pray. Smells like bull to me.
Long, long ago in the United States, things such as electrical power, natural gas lines, phone service, and other major mass entities were declared utilities.
Cell phones, through daily use, are becoming more and more important to daily life, and although we have lived without them, we have also lived without electricity as well... so don't even argue that right now. Currently due to tricks that the entire industry uses, they are continuing to charge the same rates for an older technology that is more ubiquitous. The value and cost of cell is dropping. The prices are not. Does that sound like good trade to you? Cell phones, under certain circumstances should be regulated like any other utility, due to the fact that they are a necessity, and they are currently price gouging.
Simply put, if everyone makes you sign up for a year, then you are screwed. The power company CAN'T do that. The POTS phone company cannot do that to you. They are regulated. Granted they are regulated monopolies, but at the same time, if there are only a few major cell carriers left in a few years, you are in the same boat.
Yes, there are alternatives. You can buy cell packages in all different manners. However, if you want one with good coverage outside of an urban market where altrernatives are plentiful, you not only have to pay, and most likely you have to be restricted by contracts.
It is a service. You pay for it. All of the air conditioning services don't come over and tell you that you need to sign a year contract and pay whether you use your A/C or not. The plumber doesn't make you sign a contract. There is no fine print in a plumber. There is no automatic withdrawl, or shady account management.
These days cell telephones are important for the succesful completion of the vast majority of business tasks. Collusion, or restriction of cell phone services by the way of binding contracts or other such behaviors should be considered predatory practice, and it ultimately restricts free trade.
That is why you need some slight regulation. After all, this isn't price restricting... it just sounds like cell phone lemon laws.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a power creep. (Score:4, Insightful)
Breach of contract USED to be actionable.
You also shouldn't need a lawyer to buy a friggin cell phone.
Re:Not a power creep. (Score:2)
I disagree. Every year to 18 months, I wander into my local Cingular Authorized Reseller, get a new phone for free, and a lower-priced package that includes more bells and whistles. I have to sign up for a two-year contract for that, but I've actually reduced my contract to a lower service just a few months after signing a new one with *no penalty*. As long as I don't up and quit, the contract doesn't seem to matter.
Next time I do this, I'll b
Re:Not a power creep. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:3, Insightful)
Two questions emerge:
1) How can this "bill" be modified to bot
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:3, Insightful)
The same way you do with any other return. If you return the service and the phone, but the phone is not in a resaleable condition, you'll be required to pay for it. If I cancel my cable service, and the box is trashed when I return it, they charge me for it. I would expect a cellular company to do the same thing.
If the phone is returned in
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
How is this different from most retail operations? This is sort of one of the fundamental aspects of the retail business in general.
The business sells a product to a customer. If the customer isn't satisified they can return the product if it's still in good condition.
The business may l
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Insightful)
But what about the power creep from the industry? I mean people do NOT have a choice. A cell phone is becoming necessary in day-to-day life, the average joe is brainwashed into thinking that it is whatever way the company says it is because all other companies are like that and because there is simply nothing he can do.
I don't mean to sound anti-corporate(in fact I'm quite pro-corporate), but a power creep is a power creep. And an organization controlling people is as bad as a government controlling people. I think this thing needs to be made federal and necessary.
I promise you, and trust me on this, T-Mobile will not go out of business if I cancelled my contract within 30 days. They want that money, but it won't run them out of business. I need a cell phone anyways, so some company is going to get my business, it just encourages good business practices from the cell phone companies.
It may go too far, but I think in some places it doesn't go far enough.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Seriously, a cellular bill of rights...what the hell happened to the other bill of rights, and the constitution? You know, the ones that ACTUALLY MATTER?
Why is it that.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do the cell phone companies feel like they need to hide this stuff in small print? People respect a company that is, well, respectable. I'd feel happier to buy a cell if I know *exactly* where i'm going to get charged and how much that charge is.
The cell phone companies should back this clarity.
Simon.
Re:Why is it that.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't forget, this is the US. Cellular used to be fair, they took a loss on your handset and then recovered it through a year long contract. Later on GSM intruduced the idea of locking the phone so that it would be useless except with a specific carrier. This is where the rift between the US and the rest of the world occurs. Elsewhere in the world, after the cellular company recovered their costs and made some profit they would gladly unlock the handset so you could take it to another carrier if you wished. In the US, this was almost unheard of. In fact, try asking anyone at a retail store about getting this done and 99.99% of the time they'll say it can't be done. The worst part about all of this is that they retained the contracts and have lengthened their times. So you get punished twice, you get a locked phone and you have to sign up for 1-3 years!
Further, if you do managed to unlock your phone, (by hook or by crook) many carriers will refuse to allow it's use with their service! They'd much rather you buy a new phone from them. Then there are the carriers which will allow you to bring in your own handset, but they still want you to sign up for 1-3 years. I've never understood this, there is no loss leader in this situation. They simply enter your information into their system and begin billing you, instant profit from the first bill. (They'll generally want you to pay an "activation fee" $20 for some monkey to enter two numbers along with your billing info?!? That's pure profit!)
Before all of this mess, when you could take your phone to any carrier, the phones were of higher quality because they weren't meant to get thrown away. As an example, look at Motorola handsets of the past. They were far better at receiving signals than the current ones. They were built to last, made of the same plastic used in helmets. They even designed the battery such that if the phone were dropped, it would seperate without breaking it's loking mechanism. You could throw these phones against a brick wall and they'd still work, try that with a modern phone.
Don't forget that all of these re-usable handsets winding up in the trash are bad for the environment. I don't see the environmentalists raising a stink about that, I wonder why?
Re:Why is it that.. (Score:2)
Re:Why is it that.. (Score:2, Informative)
Talk about demonizing GSM. Do you have anything to support the idea that phone were freely interchangable between carriers before GSM, because it seems to me they have *always* been locked when they came from the provider.
This is where the rift between t
Re:whats in it for the government? (Score:2)
Election Year
What about... (Score:4, Insightful)
...a Bill of Rights for the rest of us?
Re:What about... (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constituti on.billofrights.html [cornell.edu]
Re:What about... (Score:2)
Re: What about... (Score:2)
Pace to those who have replied so far, but I was talking about a BoR for non cell phone users, e.g. a right to sit through a movie without hearing a vanity ringer and a loud conversation.
Used Car Dealers... (Score:5, Interesting)
Is it just me, or does anyone else ever go into the SprintPCS store feeling like they are visiting a used car dealership? Besides the clientelle that always seem to be there (people arguing about roaming charges, people 90 days past-due on their bill, someone wanting to cancel service because of a divorce, etc.) the staff almost always has this shady look to them.
About the only place I hate worse than the SprintPCS store is the stupid sunglass counter at the mall.
It's about damn time that the government step in to regulate how these kinds of companies do business. This is actually helpful -- and I'd be willing to bet that in the long-term this kind of regulation actually *gasp* helps cellular companies.
Re:Used Car Dealers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Suppose your business is the next one the government decides it needs to regulate?
Re:Used Car Dealers... (Score:2, Interesting)
Why do people moan and complain about a service but continue to pay the company?
Try some other company. AT&T (my provider) of course has the standard reclamation fees that everyone else has, but other than that, they've been extraordinarily helpful, friendly, and honest, both on the phone and in their stores.
On another note, they (AT&T) are also one of the most expensive providers. As with almost everything, you get what you pay for. If you wanna pay bottom dollar, you get crap.
Credit rating Fraud contract law (Score:2)
Could this be considered penalty clause in the contract, and hence invalid (in some areas)?
If you have a cell phone bill, and you don't pay it, I think it is justified that they mark it on your credit record.
If it is a fraudulent claim, file the correction with the credit bureau. The credit bureaus don't want bad data on their records either.
Re:Used Car Dealers... (Score:4, Insightful)
The cell phone companies are an oligopoly. There are only a few, very big players, and they're all equally evil. If you didn't want to buy a car from Ford, GM, Toyota, Saturn, or Honda, that leaves you with a VERY small selection of cars you could buy. Taking your business elsewhere only really works in markets with many players.
Re:Used Car Dealers... (Score:3, Informative)
The problem is that there are only a handful of these companies and competition is tight; they all have to use such deceptive practices because of competition. As soon as one company does it, the others all have to if they want to compete with them.
Suppose your business is the next one the government decides it needs to regulate?
Deceptive practices reduce consumer trust for every company in that market. I myself would have gotten a cell phone a lot sooner
many problems (Score:3, Insightful)
Companies make profit of this, and we have to suffer abuse of our rights unconcevaible in other more known industries. Remember problem with software patents (I'm in Europe and it's a main problem now), or other abuses to common consumers in technology areas.
The companies should stop being so frightened. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The companies should stop being so frightened. (Score:2)
Unfortunately with these companies if most people saw the real price and costs upfront and also the full t&c they would reconsider their purchase which is why these companies dont want you to see them. They want to get you bound to a contract asap so no matter what happens you are paying them service charges for the next 12 months at least.
Re:The companies should stop being so frightened. (Score:2)
Onerous contract terms and hidden charges do not appear to have stifled growth in the mobile industry.
If this were indeed happening, the mobile careers themselves would have one of these "Bills of Rights." If consumers want it, they should vote with their feet (wallet), and the free market will work its magic. I have little faith in government regulation as a wise hand.
Let's remember, mobile phones are not a cr
Re:The companies should stop being so frightened. (Score:2)
Yeah, good point. I should be able to walk into a 7-11 and steal a candy bar, because that doesn't actually injure anyone...
We have gotten this twisted notion in the US that companies have a god-given right to make money, and consumers have a responsibility to pay for it (though they don't seem to have the same responsibility to pay taxes for government services, under the same logic). This is simply not the case. Gover
hahaha (Score:5, Funny)
(j/k of course
Good Job California (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good Job California (Score:2)
Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, I don't see why not some of them would welcome it. If their comptitors' terms have more obnoxious, obfuscated and hidden costs, they should stand to gain from it.
Kjella
Re:Depends... (Score:2)
Why, I like my Guinness quite opaque, thank you very much
I hear you about the illusion of transparency though. Oh well, I guess you can at least get the advertised price to match better with what you'll actually be paying, if not getting a clearer answer about why are you paying all those extra fees.
Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:2)
Re:Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:2)
Re:Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:2)
Re:Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:5, Funny)
Dear schnits0r,
We read your post on
Our inspectors will be around shortly to dig you up/apart to search for the WMD you refer to in your post.
Yours etc.
The Pentagon.
Re:Cellular Bill of Rights (Score:2)
You should really specify that they can only replicate their *original* DNA... don't grant them the right to unfettered replication of viral DNA, please!
They shouldn't complain (Score:4, Insightful)
As long as their competitors must play by the same rules, it shouldn't matter, right? (But they probably will fight it tooth and nail anyway)
Wish I lived there... (Score:5, Insightful)
I especially like the part about recovery fees. The wireless companies need to be held accountable, and people need to see what they're paying for. It's like Verizon charging $0.44/month for TouchTone service. Either offer it or not, but don't nickel and dime your customers to death.
I hope other states follow California's lead, and then maybe there can be some sanity in the wireless industry.
Being a Californian & Fees (Score:5, Insightful)
Lazy Consumer (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Read every contract you sign, even the fine print, even the one at Blockbuster Video. The folks in line behind you can deal with it and might learn something.
2. Read the billing information and know the law in your state, even if the state taxes are not seperated from the company "fees" on the bill your 3rd grade math skills can work it out.
3. If you don't like the way the company operates or conducts its billing, don't do business with it. People have lived for betweeen 5,940 and a billion years without cell phones them so far. You can survive with a landline if you don't want to get the "screw-job."
(Author's disclaimer - I live in a state with many miles of road that lack cellular service of any kind)
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:5, Interesting)
I was brought up well and have always made this a practice. You can imagine my shock when, upon asking Verizon for a copy of the cell phone contract before I signed (on one of those loathsome electronic signing-pads), I was told that the system was set up so that they couldn't print out a copy until I signed!
Contracts of Adhesion (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:2, Interesting)
x.1) The provider reserves the right to change the terms of the agreement at any time.
x.2) The provider reserves the right to alter it's coverage area at any time.
x.3) The provider will make changes to the terms of the agreement, or the coverage area, available at its website.
x.4) The above changes to your service plan may be made at a months notice.
-----------
SO even if you read your contract, and it verified by a lawyer, your contract is subj
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:2)
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:2)
People tell me that $40 a month per phone (and
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:2)
Um, no, your 3rd grade math skills are completely useless when it comes to distinguishing company-imposed fees from actual regulatory fees imposed by the PUC et al.
What the regulation means is that this list:
Credits, Adjustments, & Other Charges
Federal Universal Service Fund
Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee
Gross Rece
Re:Lazy Consumer (Score:2)
And when you decide you'd like to amend that contract, and they tell you to take it or leave it, as does every similar business, perhaps you'll understand the need for regulation.
What is the big deal? (Score:5, Insightful)
1 - Provide a standard 30-day out if the service is sub-par.
2 - Require transparent billing so that consumers are told all the additional fees that will raise the real cost of their mobile bills.
3 - Make sure the contract language is legible.
It creates a level playing field for all vendors and doesn't favor one over another. I don't see what the mobile providers have to complain about.
One part (Score:5, Interesting)
That line alone is what I would like in my state. The fine print I can deal with because I actually read it. But I signed up with Sprint a year and a half ago (2 yr. contract) only to realize that the signal at my house was almost non-existant. And since I was planning on using the cell phone when I made long distance calls from home, the lack of signal ruined this. If I had a 30 day trial period I would have switched immediately.
Re:One part (Score:5, Interesting)
I bought AT$T Wireless in Costco via in store promo. I informed AT$T Wireless sales gal of my exact locations for service need. They produced a service map showing coverage, showing that I was clearly inside (by miles) of the coverage area. I paid for it all at the Costco Cash Register.
Went home tried it out, did not work, all support on land line, told call back on cell phone, movd 3 ft it worked for 5 minutes then out again, this went on for 25 days. Took at all back to Costco and returned it with-in 30 days return period. Since it was bought thought they cach registers.
AT$T tried to get me pay for canceling plan, I told them I returned it to Costco for a full, with-in 30 days, refund. They tried another time to collect, I complained to Costco, and the Attn General. That ended it.
Re:One part (Score:2)
You can manage *without* landline! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Proving the point (Score:2)
For $20 more than basic landline phone service you get a phone you can take anywhere you want (like on roadtrip where you may need to call for help if your car breaks down), has caller id, voice mail, and (the big one) free long distance.
"Young people" skip the landline because it is more cost effective to only use a cell phone.
My problem with this "Bill of Rights" (Score:3, Interesting)
Keeping customers' phone numbers private is a feature of every wireless service provider. In the not-too-distant future, I expect it to become a premium feature -- we will be forced to py a higher price and read even more paperwork before we will be guaranteed that our phone numbers will not be distributed to the next corporate entity that bids on them.
I guess my point is that, while this bill of "rights" appears to be nice, I don't see what it should be such a big deal. Most of the topics covered in the bill seem to be topics that a savvy legal mind could take a phone company to court for anyway.
Re:My problem with this "Bill of Rights" (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a separate legislative issue right now. Someone (I forget who) wants to make a directory of cellular numbers, which would then mean paying to stay off of it (like with landline). It's being fought.
I guess my point is that, while this bill of "rights" appears to be nice, I don't see what it should be such a big deal. Most of the
What I'm waiting for... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, consumers need regulations against businesses when they purposely attempt to mislead to get sales. Let's start forcing business to print details of sales on the same media in the same print as the sales itself, and eliminate pricing after mail-in or non-instant rebates on any advertisement, including in store.
I'm glad California's helping consumers who get hit with hidden or hard-to-determine fees and locked into harsh contracts when the service ends up being horrible, but let's get more states helping with more problems!
30 days vs. 1 billing cycle + 10 (Score:4, Insightful)
Shouldn't that be something like within 10 days after the end of the first billing cycle? If the cell company is going to screw you, you won't know it until you receive your first statement.
Chip H.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hidden fees should be illegal for all services (Score:2)
Maybe it's because I live in California, but if I take a car in for an oil change (at an actual garage, and not just to a friend who's a mechanic) I have to sign something that tells me the price and what they're going to do before they start.
About these provisions (Score:3, Interesting)
While it may be arguable whether California can impose upon a wireless carrier these provisions and make them stick, there is one way they can make them stick: by denying court access and credit reporting.
If they are not allowed to sue in any California court to collect their unpaid bills if they do not comply, are not permitted to file with any California court or collect upon a judgement obtained from any court or from an arbitration panel, and are forbidden to file with credit reporting agencies reports of bad debts if they do not comply with these rules, they can still be held to them even if they can't be required to do so to operate.
The California Public Utilities Commission has plenty of authority. The California Constitution gives the legislature the authority to write any provision into the Public Utilities Code to regulate any form of public utility even if that provision would otherwise violate the State Constitution. And choosing whether a corporate entity has a right to access the courts and under what terms has long been within a state's province.
Paul Robinson <Postmaster@paul.washington.dc.us [mailto]>Re:You people bring it on yourselves (Score:2)
So laugh all you want. I have a very nice phone, high quality service, and all at the price of simply acknowledging mom and dad on my own time here and there. Even at the mos
Re:You people bring it on yourselves (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You people bring it on yourselves (Score:2)
Re:You people bring it on yourselves (Score:4, Interesting)
Cell phones used to be totally out of reach to anyone below a certain income level. In the 80's and 90's, TV and movies turned the simple act of talking on a cell phone into a huge status symbol, to which the masses naturally aspired. Cut to 2004, and many more people can now actually afford this fantastic technology. Unfortunately, a huge percentage of new cell phone users are in EXACTLY the situation that the OP mentions: they want the status symbol even though they can't really afford it. Why should that surprise us in the days of rampant credit card debt and record levels of personal bankruptcy?
Just within the past month, I was in line at Safeway who was paying for her groceries with one of those newfangled food stamp debit cards so I knew she was economically challenged. But to my amazement, she was talking on a cell phone the whole freakin' time she was in line. Now there's someone who's well on the way to financial responsibility and welfare independence...
Meanwhile, as an IT professional who was permanently attached to both a cell phone AND a pager for 6 years, I was only too happy to finally reach a position where I could be rid of both. I now wear my unreachability as a badge of honor!
Re:My two cents (Score:2)
Re:FIGHT THE POWER - YOU DON'T NEED A CELLPHONE!!! (Score:2)
That more or less describes every industry.
Re:FIGHT THE POWER - YOU DON'T NEED A CELLPHONE!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
2. I don't have voicemail at home. You might, but many people only need one phone line and have chosen to have a portable one.
3. Have you ever designed a cellphone? Do you work with the engineers that design them? Then STFU, because I have worked with some of them, and they aren't intentionally designed to break. If people wanted quality over cost, they'd pay for it, but the market shows they don't, and the phone makers can't afford to make cheap phones that won'
Re:I'd call this a bad idea. (Score:2)
Re:the really amazing thing (Score:2)
Re:Not going to make the slightest difference (Score:3, Interesting)
With credit cards offers they need not only a larger print, but also a table in a standard format that explains what annual fees, setup fees etc. are charged. So if the "Annual Fee" box says none, you can be certain there is no "spiffy plastic card rental fee" hidden somewhere else. When I receive and offer, I just throw away the letter and colurful brochures enclosed and go straight to the table.
Hopefully they will be also be