Verizon Agrees To Pay Up For 'Inadequately Disclosed' Fees For Broadband Customers
from the but-inadequately-disclosed-fees-is-how-we-survive! dept
We recently wrote about a lawsuit filed in New York against Time Warner Cable for "deceptive acts and practices" regarding hidden charges and fees, and a failure to deliver a promised rate for broadband access. Tons of people have been pointing out that they've seen the same thing -- and now, down in Maryland, Verizon has agreed to pay $1.375 million to Verizon FiOS customers who found they were hit with a variety of hidden and unexpected fees with their broadband connections:The telecommunications company agreed to pay about $1.375 million to Maryland customers who the state's Consumer Protection Division says were improperly charged termination fees or had to pay for "inadequately disclosed" equipment costs in order to use the service, according to the attorney general's office.Of course, in agreeing to settle, Verizon also "denied that it violated any Maryland laws" but promises to more accurately represent fees in the future.
The firm also agreed to pay a $250,000 penalty to the state, and $75,000 in costs
The settlement follows a wide-ranging investigation of Verizon, including its alleged failure to deliver promised promotional items to new FiOS customers, such as free televisions and gift cards; its offer of bundled prices that did not include the cost to lease equipment necessary to receive the services; its alleged practice of assessing early termination fees when customers cancelled after they did not receive what they had been promised; and other issues, including billing complaints, contract disputes and poor customer service. Although Verizon denied that it violated any Maryland laws, it agreed to a settlement that addresses the Division's concerns.This is not the first time Verizon has had to pay up in this manner. Obviously, the amount paid up here is barely even pocket change for Verizon, which is why these kinds of activities continue. When you have monopolistic or near monopolistic control over your market, you can get away with all sorts of questionable fees and charges on users.
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Filed Under: consumer protection division, fees, fines, maryland
Companies: verizon
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As I've said before, if you actually want businesses to behave better, the "cost of" bad behavior has to be painful. Verizon just paid out approximately $1.6 million over this case. If they made $5 million (just making up a number here, no idea what it was actually worth) off of their misbehavior, then that can be regarded as a 300%+ return on an investment of lawlessness!
The standard really needs to be "crime does not pay." If they made $5 million on this, the fine needs to be $10 million at the very least. Make the ROI negative--fix the incentives--and they'll stop doing this. (While lobbying for a return to easier laws, of course.)
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Jerks.
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Monopoly had nothing to do with it, dearie
Reality check:
Monopoly power would mean exploiting a situation where the customer has no viable alternative. When the customer says "I'd rather have nothing than that", that's the end of it.
At this point Verizon is no longer able to make use of monopolistic power and is instead "only" using the power of being a bully with a large legal department and deep pockets.
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Re: Monopoly had nothing to do with it, dearie
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That's why I think companies should be fined in terms of percentage of their annual revenue. For instance light problems would lead to 1% fines while severe breaches would gobble whole 10%. That would lead to billion dollar fines and companies thinking twice before trying to be smart asses.
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still waiting
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