Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984
AT&T makes it more expensive to cancel DirecTV or Internet service
AT&T will start charging customers for the full month after they cancel TV or Internet service, ending its customer-friendly practice of providing a prorated credit for the final month.
Even if you cancel on the first day of a new billing period, you'll be charged for the full month and service will continue for the rest of the month whether you want it or not. To avoid paying for a month of service you don't want, you'd need to cancel by the last day of the previous billing period.
The change will take effect on January 14, 2019 and apply even when a customer is paying on a month-to-month basis and no longer under contract.
"We bill in advance for DirecTV, U-verse TV, AT&T Phone, AT&T Internet, and Fixed Wireless Internet accounts per our service agreements," AT&T said in its announcement of the change. "Currently, if you cancel any of these services, we give you prorated credits for the remaining days in your bill period. Starting January 14, 2019, if you disconnect these services before the bill period is over, we won't offer those prorated credits anymore. But, you can still use your services until the last day of your bill period."
AT&T noted that it already charges for the full final month when you cancel mobile service. But instead of changing the mobile policy to match the more forgiving TV-and-broadband policy, AT&T is changing the TV-and-broadband policy to match the more draconian terms of its cellular service.
"We're making this change so our video and broadband services follow the same billing policies as our mobility services," AT&T wrote.
(Score: 2) by aiwarrior on Tuesday December 04 2018, @05:46PM
I second the meh. Well if you know that your commitments are due in a given time, then prepare for it.
How tough is it that you keep some semblance of control over your life? I just went through over this and had actually a bit more pain related to the fact I needed to return the router to some random warehouse and needed to pay shipping costs. This yes is not friendly. It was easy for them to give it should be easy to drop by the local agent are deposit the modem, but no...oh well. Life has it's realities and i think my forefathers had it quite tougher(no water or electricity ahahha) so i do not complain.
Regarding the AI...i am no sure this would be a problem at the customer level...but at the jobs level it will be a disaster. A lot of people get a living from call centers. Even the gig economy is slightly supported by call center jobs or mc jobs where your passion is still not giving you a living but you want to make ends meet.