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posted by janrinok on Thursday September 19 2019, @01:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the you-might-have-an-account! dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow6430

Lawsuit: AT&T signed customers up for DirecTV Now without their knowledge

AT&T supervisors encouraged sales reps to create fake DirecTV Now accounts to make the online video service seem more successful than it really was, a class-action complaint alleges.

AT&T "promot[ed] and reward[ed] account fraud" such as creating the fake accounts and signing AT&T customers up for DirecTV Now "without the customer knowing," the lawsuit claims.

The new allegations were made Friday in an amended complaint as part of a lawsuit filed against AT&T in April in US District Court for the Southern District of New York. The lawsuit alleges that AT&T lied to investors in order to hide DirecTV Now's failure.

"AT&T misrepresented the true condition of DirecTV Now and hid the associated risks," the amended complaint says. DirecTV Now's inevitable failure was subsequently made clear when subscriber numbers began to drop, the amended complaint says:

The dramatic decline in DirecTV Now subscriber numbers was a materialization of the risks associated, including: improper sales practices, such as the creation of fake accounts, which predictably led subscribers to cancel these accounts, upon realizing they were being billed for a service they did not use; the aggressive use of promotional campaigns to artificially sustain subscriber levels; and selling the product at irrationally low prices that would ultimately need to increase.


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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday September 19 2019, @12:59PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Thursday September 19 2019, @12:59PM (#896068) Journal

    It seems like there's a catastrophic loss of trust now that spans all sectors. Maybe we can chalk it up to having better access to information such that we now can know and find out about the dirty tricks and cheats that have always happened. Maybe there's something else going on also. But civilization depends on trust, and without it I don't know how it can continue.

    Can DIY, or something like it, be the way? There are people out there experimenting with mesh networks and distributed tech. If we have dirt cheap memory can local caching overcome the pitfalls of lag?

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
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