Class Action Filed Against Verizon Wireless 42
Nuclear Elephant writes "Kirtland & Packard has filed a California-based class action suit against Verizon Wireless alleging some of their handsets have been advertised to have certain features, only come to find later that they were crippled for profit. With the Motorola Bluetooth Hacker's Contest ending unsuccessfully, many have taken this opportunity as a last-ditch effort to change things at Verizon." We mentioned the Verizon/Bluetooth episode earlier.
Waiving class action rights (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:3, Informative)
works on some contracts...
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:2)
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:2)
Ok, but now what do I do about this white-out all over my screen?
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Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:2)
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:2, Informative)
Doesn't really matter (Score:3, Informative)
You cannot sign away all rights. In particular the US constitution:
Contract law arises under the US Constitution, so the court system always has jurisdiction. Courts do not look kindly on anything taking their power.
Now a judge will generally agree that if you signed a contract to use s
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:1)
If they can create as many legal differences as possible as how the contract is interpreted, they can forstall a national (huge) class action at the class certification stage.
I agree with the previous poster -- cross off and initial any portion
Re:Waiving class action rights (Score:2)
Re:Who's next? (Score:3, Insightful)
However the moonroof (OBEX), which is there, is locked out completely. It's just too dangerous for you to use (asteroids might fall in!).
I stupidly signed up with Verizon. When my contract expires, I'm gone.
Re:Who's next? (Score:5, Interesting)
They'll probably sock it to you then, too.
Several years ago, my wife got a cell phone through Verizon. We both used it, until it started getting a bit old and flakey. Then we each got our own cell phone, through two other providers, and cancelled the Verizon phone.
Verizon promptly added a $175 cancellation fee. It was long past the original two-year contract, and we hadn't signed any new contract. We just kept paying the bill, and the phone kept working. We should have been on their month-to-month service, though of course we never got any sort of paperwork (that we know of or signed) about this.
We've tried calling them to talk about it. Their response is to simply bounce us around between different people until the connection gets "accidentally" lost. Nobody at Verizon has shown any interest in discussing this charge. Their attitude is clearly "We put it on your bill, so you have to pay it."
Funny thing is, when we mention this to other people, a lot of them say "Yeah, they did the same to us."
So be prepared for charges that you weren't expecting, and which Verizon won't explain.
Re:Who's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
We've tried calling them to talk about it. Their response is to simply bounce us around between different people until the connection gets "accidentally" lost. Nobody at Verizon has shown any interest in discussing this charge. Their attitude is clearly "We put it on your bill, so you have to pay it."
And you let it go? I had something similar happen to me. My cable company tried to charge me for a cable modem that I never returned when I quit the service. Of course since I was using my own, I never go
Re:Who's next? (Score:2)
FCC Form 475 is your friend! (Score:1)
I ended up calling the State Attorney Genera
Maybe they should make money on the phones (Score:1)
I am convinced (Score:1, Funny)
I fully support this lawsuit (Score:4, Interesting)
If anyone knows ways to get involved, or to help this effort, please tell.
Lastly, I find the general plight of cell phones particularly tragic. Every phone I've ever owned has been crippled in serious ways just like the article mentions. People, cell phones are the future PC's. It's great that we have linux, free software, etc for today's personal computer, and yet before we've even finished freeing the personal computer, they're becoming obselete(exageration) to mobile devices. When will have have a truly open and standards based cell phone?
My only idea so far is to have a source-forge type of place for consumer electronics, where people can collaberate and at least create the designs for "freer" phones. Perhaps there could be a hardware specific GPL?
Discuss, discuss, I'd love to hear your inights on this,
Re:I fully support this lawsuit (Score:5, Informative)
Well, there is one major problem with an open/free "smartphone": How do you go about getting your packets through the cell-phone system? The frequencies are owned by corporations like Verizon, and you can only communicate if you use their approved equipment.
It's true that a PDA can contain a wifi card, but at least in North America, that only works in much less than 1% of the landscape, and in most places, you first have to negotiate access through an access point, and if you move 100 meters, you have to do it again, paying in full each time. If wifi access were universal, you could use VoIP on top of it and be done with the phone system. But not this year.
You can do IP across most cell-phone channels now, too, but you can only do it with equipment approved by whatever carrier owns that channel at the spot you're standing, and there's no way you'll get approval for your own toy.
A couple of decades ago, the US government ended the "no foreign attachments" rule of the phone companies. There was a huge explosion of new telephone gadgetry, to everyone's profit (including the phone companies who fought the change). We currently have a "no foreign attachments" rule in effect for cell phones, which means that we can't develop anything on our own. We have to wait breathlessly for the phone companies to tell us what we're allowed to use.
Maybe some day this will change, too, and we'll suddenly find the cell-phone system as useful as it should be. Or maybe the wifi system will expand to full coverage.
But it probably won't happen this year.
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A bit offtopic -- unlocking the phone (Score:2)
Me and my wife bought our phones from Cingular because we wanted to use them abroad and GSM seems to be the most universally accepted. OK, so she was planning her trip to Russia and I called Cingular to unlock the phone -- no luck, "your contract is not over yet, can not do". Anyway, she takes the phone with her, goes into one of the SIM card vendors o
Re: (Score:1)
T-Mobile's pretty cool about it (Score:2)
Re:A bit offtopic -- unlocking the phone (Score:2)
Re:A bit offtopic -- unlocking the phone (Score:2)
Sure it is fair. You didn't have to buy the locked phone. Buy from someone who doesn't do it.
That is, unless you want to convince us that your cell provider held a gun to your head and made you buy a locked phone. Anything short of that and it is your own ignorance that brough
Re: (Score:1)
Re:A bit offtopic - unlocking the phone (Score:2)
It's very likely he knew. Unlocking locked cellphones is a big graymarket business. Every self-respecting operator of a small cellphone service shop should know enough to unlock at least the major brands, at least the half-year-old-and-older models. Reverse engineering of the handsets and flashing the proper patches into their firmware is a way to achieve that. Long time ago (7+ years), when the config st
Re:A bit offtopic - unlocking the phone (Score:2)
Re:I fully support this lawsuit (Score:2)
I have a Kyocera 7135, from verizon, and it can do everything people can't do without paying.. if I have an mp3 or wav on my comp, I can make it a ringer or phone sound.. I can move files and pictures from my phone to comp by cable or IR or wirelessly, I can use it for a laptop modem.. in fact, every feature of my palm 4 device works as advertised and spec'ed
that said I fear replacing it a year-2 down the road for some clamped down MF that I can't do an
Class action lawsuits (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Class action lawsuits (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Class action lawsuits (Score:1)
I have a Motorola T720 (Score:3)
When I bought it, not a god damn thing said "this phone has a reduced featureset from factory specifications", nor anything that said "all 'features' have exorbitant fees." Why would I assume a feature cost me more money? I thought that crap was to get me to buy the phone in the first place.
It's pretty clear their business model is to deceive people into buying their crippled products and then nickel and dime their customers.
One other note: I bought Verizon's GPRS cable, which was advertized to work with WinXP for 20 dollars. I was using Win2k at the time, which worked fine. By the time I upgraded the OS, I would discover that the software did not in fact work with XP, but worked with a "pre-release" of XP at time of product release. I ended up having to buy the product again, which was a completely different set of software by this point of time (which is probably why I couldn't exchange it, plus it cost 40 now), so I assume that everyone who ever bought the first kit with XP was basically screwed. Thanks again Verizon.
Re:I have a Motorola T720 (Score:2)
I have the same problem with the same phone here in Canada from Rogers/ATT.
Many functions have been disbaled, the web-access is set up in such a way as to require at least one extra request to their servers to make a web-request, thereby drivin
Crippled phone (Score:1)
I don't know if this is old news on
http://www.nuclearelephant.com/p [nuclearelephant.com]