After A Ten Year Nap The Government Wakes Up On Cramming, Finally Holds Big Carriers Accountable (Sort Of)
from the better-late-than-never dept
Most people are familiar with the practice of cramming -- or suddenly waking up one day to find your wireless phone bill stocked with $10 per month services (usually horoscopes, "premium text message" or ringtones) you didn't ask for and don't want. While the government has occasionally come down hard on the small companies engaging in these scams because they're easy legal wins, it has historically left the big carriers (and campaign contributors) alone, despite the fact that AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint all turn a blind eye to the practice in exchange for up to 40% of the proceeds. After a deep slumber, the government has finally started taking bigger companies to task, even if it's a day late and more than a few dollars short.Back in October, the FTC announced it had struck a $105 million settlement with AT&T, with an investigation finding that not only did AT&T turn a blind eye to crammers and the mountains of consumer complaints, it actively worked to make getting refunds more difficult. The telco also intentionally made bills more confusing so customers would have a harder time figuring out that they were being ripped off:
"The structure of AT&T’s consumer bills compounded the problem of the unauthorized charges, according to the complaint, by making it very difficult for customers to know that third-party charges were being placed on their bills. On both the first page of printed bills and the summary of bills viewed online, consumers saw only a total amount due and due date with no indication the amount included charges placed on their bill by a third party. The complaint alleges that within online and printed bills, the fees were listed as “AT&T Monthly Subscriptions,” leaving consumers to believe the charges were part of services provided by AT&T."AT&T's not alone. Rumors indicate that Sprint is about to face similar penalties, and it seems like only a matter of time before Verizon joins the party. The FTC has also struck a settlement deal with T-Mobile that has the "uncarrier" paying $90 million in consumer refunds, $18 million in fines and penalties to the attorneys general of all 50 states, and another $5 million in fines to the FCC. Despite their recent reputation for consumer friendly behavior (the company said the FTC's allegations were "unfounded and without merit" earlier this year), T-Mobile, like AT&T, made getting refunds nearly impossible and intentionally made the charges hard to see on consumer bills:
"According to the FTC’s July complaint, T-Mobile’s phone bills made it nearly impossible for consumers to find and understand third-party subscription charges. The FTC’s complaint against T-Mobile noted that in many instances information about the third-party charges crammed on to customers’ bills was buried deep in phone bills that totaled more than 50 pages in length."Of course if you figure out that carriers were getting 40% of $10 per month charged to tens of millions of customers for more than a decade, the fines don't even come close to the amount of money these companies made by ripping off their subscribers. Better late than never?
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Filed Under: carriers, cramming, fcc
Companies: at&t, sprint, t-mobile, verizon
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Not so much, no
No, not really. They're getting a minor slap on the wrist and allowed to keep almost all of the profits they made off the practice. If anything, that's likely going to increase the prevalence of the scam, as the carriers now know that even when they get caught it's still incredibly profitable for them.
The fines are so low in comparison to what they're being fined for, that they are less punishment and more encouragement to keep on with the scummy practice.
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Never seen it?
but seriously, wouldn't calling the company and saying 'That is not authorized' be the end of it? Annoying sure, but checking your bill for accuracy is a simple step when I'm going to be giving out my money :)
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So the government is basically saying sure, you can scam people, but you must give us our cut of the proceeds. Scam the public out of $100 through hidden charges and we will fine you $10 of it. Rinse and repeat and it becomes a mutually beneficial relationship.
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Re: Never seen it?
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Re: Not so much, no
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Re: Re: Not so much, no
If the government agencies handing out the fines don't care enough to punish them the first time, what makes you think they'd suddenly grow a spine and punish them the second/third/fourth time?
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Re: Re: Never seen it?
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Re: Not so much, no
I'm getting tired of fines for breaking the law. It's long past time to see some CEO's and BOD's loose their jobs and held accountable with jail time like the rest of us 90%-ers would get if we tried anything similar.
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Re:
That said, I always prefer paper too :)
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Re: Re: Not so much, no
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Re: Re: Re: Never seen it?
Personally I would never give access to my checking account for automatic payment to any bill. But when I question my friends, some fairly thrifty and knowledgable, they do.
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I think all phone carriers charge extra for the paper bill (again, not a "discount" imo).
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There's probably a full generation walking around with no idea how to deal with paper records. Sometimes I feel so old.
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Re: Never seen it?
A few years ago we had bogus charges start showing up on our phone bill. When we called AT&T to dispute the charges, they said an authorized family member had subscribed to the services. When we asked who, they gave us our dog's name.
Without saying why, we said that we knew 100 percent for certain that "person" had not authorized the charges and we would prove it in court. The customer rep immediately backed, down and refunded the charges. However, it wasn't until the threat of court that they did so. Needless to say we're not with AT&T today, but it sounds like they're all crooks at this point.
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Re: Re: Not so much, no
If a company makes $100 million off of a scam, then the absolute minimum they should be fined should be $100 million. If a fine completely wiped out any profits a company made from a scam, then it would also eliminate any incentive, as there would be no profit in it.
Until fines reach that point however, they're little more than minor inconveniences to large companies, who will happily pay out $10 million, keep the other $90 million they made, and continue on, business as usual.
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The government thieves don't like competition.
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Wrong word
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Re: Wrong word
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