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AT&T Businesses Communications The Internet

AT&T Sued For Allegedly Inflating DirecTV Now Subscriber Numbers (engadget.com) 19

A lawsuit seeking class action status says AT&T is inflating AT&T TV Now -- previously known as DirecTV Now -- subscriber numbers by creating fake users. From a report: It's accusing the company's management of carrying out the scheme in an effort to make the service look good in the eyes of investors even though it was struggling with serious technical and financial problems. The management did so, according to the lawsuit, by encouraging employees to add DirecTV Now subscription fees to subscribers' accounts without their knowledge or consent. One of the methods employees allegedly used is tacking on up to three accounts to a single customer's phone number -- including those who just signed up for a free trial -- and running their credit card three times. In some cases, customers were reportedly charged for a subscription even though they made it clear that they didn't want it. Sales employees allegedly made and used fake email accounts in both instances.
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AT&T Sued For Allegedly Inflating DirecTV Now Subscriber Numbers

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  • WtF (Score:5, Funny)

    by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Tuesday September 17, 2019 @08:28PM (#59206230)
    Sounds to me like Wells Fargo management found a new home
    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      That's exactly what I was thinking.

      It shows us that Wells Fargo wasn't punished hard enough that this happened.

      Probably should just nationalize these companies and then sell off the stock to new holders in and auction.

    • by SB5407 ( 4372273 )
      Ugh. And customers who got scammed (charged once, twice or three times a month for service they didn't sign up for nor agreed to) can't sue AT&T because AT&T requires customers to give up their right to sue. Tell your senators and representatives today to pass legislation banning forced/mandatory arbitration for customers.

  • John Barnett
    John Bigboote
    John Camp
    John Careful Walker
    John Chief Crier
    John Cooper
    John Coyote
    John Edwards
    John Fat Eating
    John Fish
    John Fledgling
    John Gomez
    John Grim
    John Guardian
    John Icicle Boy
    John Jones
    John Joseph
    John Kim Chi
    John Lee
    John Littlejohn
    John Many Jars
    John Milton
    John Mud Head
    John Nephew
    John Nolan
    John O'Connor
    John Omar
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    John Rajeesh
    John Ready to Fly
    John Repeat Dance
    John Roberts
    John Scott
    John Shaw
    John Smallberries
    John Starbird
    John Take Cover
    John Thorny St
    • Smallberries nearly killed me.

    • You missed the best:

      John Careful Walker
      John Chief Crier
      John Fat Eating
      John Guardian
      John Icicle Boy
      John Littlejohn
      John Many Jars
      John Mud Head
      John Ready to Fly
      John Repeat Dance
      John Take Cover
      John Thorny Stick
      John Two Horns

  • Wells Fargo 2.0 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday September 17, 2019 @08:37PM (#59206254) Journal

    by encouraging employees to add DirecTV Now subscription fees to subscribers' accounts without their knowledge or consent...customers were reportedly charged for a subscription even though they made it clear that they didn't want it.

    This fits our family's personal experience with AT&T. They kept tacking on funny fees and services, like "phone insurance", whaddever the hell that is. When you bring it up with the representative, they say, "Oh, it was probably just a typo on the operator's part". Hell of a lot of typos. Further, it would take 2 or 3 months before the fee finally disappeared from our bill.

    My experience is that oligopolies know they can screw you over because their 1 or 2 other competitors also screw you over. It's like choosing between getting f$cked in the mouth or the anus by a wild boar.

    The other telecom had lousy connections, so we had to choose between lousy customer service (ghost fees) or lousy connections. And we're in a well populated area.

    Capitalism fails to work properly when there's insufficient choice to be able to bail on assholes.

    • Not capitalism, you're thinking of free markets. For a free market to work, there needs to be a free market. As you correctly point out, internet service is most definitely not a free market. It is heavily regulated, with high barriers to entry, and it's not surprising at all the result you've gotten. In fact it is the most likely outcome.
      • The "last mile problem" requires regulation because it's expensive and materially wasteful for each competitor to lay down duplicate connective wiring to each house.

        My solution would be that the "last mile" of wiring be a public utility, managed mostly by state and local governments.

        However, any content provider can provide content to the neighborhood "switch-box", roughly every few miles apart, and hook customers in and out of their service with the flip of one switch/dial. Content providers then don't hav

    • It's like choosing between getting f$cked in the mouth or the anus by a wild boar.>

      I'd pick mouth because then I could at least bite back. But we digress...

  • This corporation has a solid tradition of false advertising, unsubstantiated charges, anti trust violations, poor service, ridiculous fees, selling out their customers to any bidder, damaging customer credit, and generally ripping off everyone in any way possible. The are monopolistic, fascist, mediocre, greedy, and have absolutely no incentive to change. We get what we pay for, so perhaps we should stop paying them.

  • This sounds like pure and simple fraud. I wonder how AT&T's lawyers will try to spin this though.

  • that I can't use my creds to sign into Turner services like TBS. This is ridiculous considering that AT&T owns Turner. Can AT&T not work out licensing details with ITSELF!?

    That's the sort of thing that should turn off investors. Not that I would ever buy a piece of AT&T, it's a doomed dinosaur that has become so big that it can't properly function. A dysfunctional mess of unintegrated and unrelated or even conflicting operations.

  • Called them, signed up for a year because that's how long my rental term was. Tech comes out, hands a bunch papers for me to sign which I do.

    End of term, I call to cancel, only to find out I'm under contract for yet another year. The CSR nearly INSTANTLY produced a scan of my signature agreeing to a 2 year term (which means this is a common occurence...). So, legally, I'm stuck. Yes, I had no time to read what was thrust at me, but ultimately, it's my fault that I didn't.

    I resolved then and there to a)

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