Nothing is harder than cancelling internet service, with the possible exception of cancelling a gym membership.
In order to cancel Mediacom's 'service,' I had to send a letter[1] to them, with copies to their general counsel, threatening 99 kinds of lawsuit. I made the letter intentionally deranged, complete with footnotes about financial BDSM, to give them the impression that I would actually do it. They cancelled the account. It was pretty fun to ignore the panicked calls from their lawyers for a bit too.
Once I had to cancel an entire credit card to get out from under a gym membership.
This is an anti-pattern that some companies follow. I remember trying to cancel an account from a grocery delivery service. There was no option online to cancel the subscription. The only option was to call them during their working hours which were different from mine because we were in different time zones. After waiting for 30mins I finally got connected to a human on the other side. They tried pressure sales tactics to get me to continue with the service even though I made it clear that I did not need their service anymore. The call itself took about 30 minutes. This is such an egregious waste of my time just to cancel a frickin subscription. These services cost actual money. On the other hand, there are "free" newsletters which hide their unsubscription button under layers of pages and clicks. It's a good thing gmail provides an "unsubscribe" button on the top. There should be a service which basically manages all your subscriptions(bits/bytes & atoms/molecules) in one place and allows you to activate/deactivate them. I would definitely pay for such a service. Or a website which ranks services based on ease of use, cost, cancelling headaches, most important clauses in their terms of use etc.
> After waiting for 30mins I finally got connected to a human on the other side. They tried pressure sales tactics to get me to continue with the service even though I made it clear that I did not need their service anymore. The call itself took about 30 minutes. This is such an egregious waste of my time just to cancel a frickin subscription.
This brings back memories of one of my first jobs. I worked for a call center outsourcing company doing overnight tech support for a nationwide ISP that would advise you when you received mail. One of the things we did was to dump all calls into the same call queue after 2am in my time zone so the first four hours of my shift were normal technical support calls and the last six hours were everything, including billing.
The contract owners in Virginia were very motivated that we continue the heavy-handed "retention" efforts even in the generalist phone queue. I remember one script we were given for cancellations ran to fifteen pages, including notes and policies.
But one of the myriad nice things about working in the middle of the night is there are no managers around to give a shit and the on-shift Quality Assurance rep was an employee of my call center company, not of the big ISP like on other shifts, and the overnight QA people officially gave zero shits. If anyone wound up in the all-purpose queue asking to cancel, we'd all do it with minimal hassle because we hated the process as much as the soon-to-be-ex-customers.
(When Virginia rolled out new policies to "verify" script compliance, like flagging cancellations made on calls with a handle time under ten minutes--which is saying something in itself--we'd just put the customer on hold for 12 minutes to "process the cancellation" and go on a free break.)
> There should be a service which basically manages all your subscriptions(bits/bytes & atoms/molecules) in one place and allows you to activate/deactivate them.
The last time I changed my mobile phone number I did it to get away from the incessant harrassment from a gym after I canceled my membership (canceling was itself extremely difficult).
Laws only work if they're enforced. It can be illegal but how much effort does it take to actually get the problem investigated by the relevant authorities?
Well, harassment can be a criminal offence here, and depending on the circumstances actual police officers will turn up to formally notify someone that a complaint of harassment has been made against them. I imagine uniformed police officers turning up at your corporate HQ would be enough to get most businesses' attention.
The UK ( whence comes this article ) has a very competitive ISP marketplace, there are several dozen ISPs vying for my custom at my property using a variety of connection technology.
But most people in the UK sign-up to the Big Three ( BT Retail, Virgin, TalkTalk ) due to their intense advertising and bundle 'deals'. So those three consider themselves the market and compete with one another for that pool of customers. Naturally they make leaving difficult because they have spent so much on acquisition.
The other 20% of customers shop around based on individual requirements. I've been with my small, efficient ISP for 12 years and have no reason to change.
The UK ISP marketplace is not competitive. In most places you have no choice but to go with Virgin if you want half-decent speeds. The rest of the ISPs are just selling DSL which is crap compared to Virgin and there’s no easy way to tell how well it will perform in advance before signing up (it depends on the state of the wiring).
I've not had working broadband for six months since moving house and signing up with Virgin. After explaining the issue to the fith rep for the third time one day I was told my 600m/s latency and packet loss was because I had a monthly usage of 500GB on a 100mb/s connection which was therefore five times as much as I'd paid for and that I needed to upgrade my package.
There's a reason these lot link your account to your credit rating and good luck escaping them even with a regulator judgement in your favour, because they'll just ignore that too.
You can't expect anything other than that response when it comes from a monkey getting paid less than a quid an hour and that can barely understand logic, let alone the technical implications of what they're selling.
I don't know what it is with customer service, whether it's just the low pay or if there's something else at play that explicitly selects for the dumbest idiots on the planet or is it the working conditions that cause their mental abilities to deteriorate so much?
Cancelling anything should be easier but certainly not harder than signing up. The signup processes tend to be ironed out to the point that even the most minute friction is removed using endless AB tests and user surveys. The cancellation process tends to be manual, high friction, can require documentation that never needed to be present for the signup process to begin with and in some places when it looks like you might actually successfully cancel there is a fair chance your call will get accidentally disconnected and you have to start all over again, preferably with the one person manning the 'cancel' option in the VRS dealing with the 200 or so waiting callers before you first.
They told me I couldn't cancel in advance, I had to ring the month before I wanted the service cut, otherwise I'd cancel and it would end at the end of the month.
When I rang during that month, they then told me I had to give a month's notice and would be charged for an extra month.
Took me a few hours of phone calls to eventually get that dropped.
A good consumer protection law would be some requirement that cancelling a service is similar in friction to signing up for that service (obviously vague, but you get my point). You shouldn't be allowed to require a phone call to cancel a service.
Oh, this was also while I was in Cambridge and I was getting dial-up speeds regularly on my fibre line because they were so oversubscribed, while I was still getting leaflets through the door telling me to sign up for their service. It shouldn't be legal to advertise a service you don't have the capacity to actually provide, and still take people's money for it.
I remember one time I rang about it, explained and the guy went "I'll just look up and see if we have any congestion issues". After a few seconds, I heard him go "holy shit" away from the receiver, then come back to me and just start apologising and saying he could see why I'd have a problem.
I’ve tried to cancel my virgin media subscription twice (because it’s too expensive), and each time was upsold a more expensive package.
I explained this to my wife, who laughed at me, then the same thing happened to her.
Once you politely say you want to cancel, I suggest not answering their questions and to only repeat the word "cancel" over and over until the other person gets the point.
Definitely don't let them run their script and mess you around.
Personally, I tend to start any call with a customer support person with something like "Hello, I'm calling about an existing account, would you like the account number?". Almost invariably, they will say yes and then do a couple of checks to confirm my identity for data protection purposes.
At this point they know exactly who I am, and they probably ask why I'm calling. If I'm asking to change or cancel something, I state that immediately, so now they have a record of both my identity and my request.
By now, I'll also have a pretty good idea of whether I'm talking to a human being who is interested in helping me or some call centre automaton who's just going to be awkward and stick to a script.
If they then try to give me the run around, I just repeat that I've informed them of my details and my wish to change/cancel, if necessary state that I'll be cancelling payment authority accordingly, and then tell them I'm ending the call.
If possible, I'll also keep a recording of the call (which is legal in my country) but at the very least I'll make an immediate written record of the time of the call, who I spoke to, and what was said.
I cancelled quite easily, because I explained that I was not only moving house, but moving into a house that already had Virgin Media broadband. I guess that moved them to the part of their script where they actually go through with the cancellation.
I would probably use that again in the future, even if it were a lie.
This is my experience also - I was moving flat and already had sorted internet with a different provider, so there wasn’t really much budging. The operator did try and ask me if I wanted to refer the new tenants of our soon-to-be flat up with Virgin, or if I had any friends who would like to switch and I’m like lol no.
I once downgraded my Virgin package, the online support was helpful and let me know which department to ask for and exactly what to request. Once on the phone I think I was forwarded on about 3 times before I got the right person. From that point on it was really painless. I think it took about 20 minutes in total? All I wanted to do was drop down to the lowest speed package and stop paying for the landline phone service I was never going to use.
I now have the opposite problem, I'd like to upgrade my package and get a higher uplink speed, but the website just throws a generic error if I try to view upgrades available to my account. I'm not bothered enough to pick up the phone yet.
It's sad that 20 minutes out of your day is what qualifies as painless in this regard. The phone companies/ISPs are like cats training their owners to just accept the way things are.
Compared to what they could have put me through, yeah it was painless. I should be able to completely manage my account on-line, including changing packages or updating payment details.
I imagine they don't offer such functionality because they're making quite a bit of money off of people who would downgrade or quit if they had an easier way of doing it. Outside of regulation forcing their hand, I don't ever see a company making this sort of thing easier.
I rang up several years ago to try to get a discount for reasons I can't remember. I ended up being upsold and today I'm spending far more money than I should, but my Internet is so, so fast. And my IP address, whilst not "static", changes about once every three years. Not something you'd run a website on, but very convenient as a developer when being restricted by IP range.
I've heard the customer service is bad, but to be honest, I never need it speak to them. On the whole, a happy customer over the last 18 years (whoever they were when I signed up in 2002- NTL? Cable& Wireless?)
IIRC Comcast also does this. They tell you your account is canceled and then you start getting charged extra. A facet of giving pay based upsell targets to desperate call center staff.
Abuses such as this infuriate me, and I typically have a very low tolerance for them now.
Any business that is causing trouble at my expense still gets one polite attempt to contact them via their preferred means and a reasonable chance to respond, but usually only one. I'm not hanging around on the phone for more than a few minutes or waiting more than a couple of working days for a substantial response to an online message.
My next contact is normally now a recorded delivery letter sent to their registered address, which here in England is something any business with the typical legal structure must have as a matter of public record and where mail sent to it must be read. I set out my grievance, what I want them to do about it, and often at this point some compensation I want for the problem and/or subsequent trouble getting it dealt with, in a form that can become the start of a formal legal action if necessary.
This strategy has generally been enough to get whatever the problem was resolved reasonably quickly and without any further messing around. I suspect this is because anything that turns up in that form and is potentially relevant to a real legal action automatically gets passed to the business's legal team to deal with. The legal team presumably then has both the awareness to recognise a legitimate grievance and the authority to do something about it rather than let it escalate.
I don't like that this seems to have become necessary to get a reasonable response from a lot of large businesses today, but fortunately for all of us in my country, there isn't actually any obligation to play by the business's rules in a dispute if they're giving us the run-around.
So, this didn't help me with Virgin Media in the past (though I did get it sorted by finding someone relatively senior and bothering them until they got it sorted), but it usually does, as you say.
In general, I don't allow companies messing me around to profit from it. Even if it takes longer than it is worth, I make a point of principle that I somehow get more back from them than I was cheated out of or they neglected to deliver. Usually this ends up costing them much more than just behaving reasonably in the first place. I find finding a way to do this cathartic. It isn;t always entirely legal though.
If more people did this, it wouldn't be worth companies messing people around.
I try the same but had to give up once. HarperCollins released a book series as a series of early Android apps. When the app launches for the first time, it downloads the assets. I paid for them and came back to read them several years later but the server was down.
Reviews mentioned this and the official reply was to contact them for a refund. I did but multiple times but they alternated between ignoring me and refusing. Eventually I gave up. I no longer buy anything from HarperCollins.
Litigating on principle can be a losing proposition, at least if you value your time and money more than your moral satisfaction. However, in my experience it's true that if you don't take any nonsense but stand your ground and are willing to take legal action if it really does come to that, you often end up with some token compensation in addition to getting the problem fixed.
I imagine there could be a good business in the automation of the creation + address discovery + delivery of such letters. Like automated DMCA takedown notices, but C2B rather than B2C. “Pay a dollar to have our lawyers cancel a subscription for you.”
(Even better if you really do have a team of lawyers willing to work on contingency to take these sure-bet claims to court if necessary—just their existence would be an extra layer of deterrence.)
Maybe, but then the main point of having a small claims system is that a normal person should be able to use it with relatively little overhead and without needing to bring expensive lawyers into the situation. You do need to do a little homework if it's the first time you're thinking of making this sort of claim and as always you should make sure you are being fair and reasonable about trying to fix things before going all legal on them, but there's decent information about how to use the system available from the relevant government websites these days if you need it.
Virgin completely ignored my complaint letter despite being delivered via recorded delivery, so even that isn't enough in certain cases.
Cancelling the payment and explaining the situation to the subsequent debt collector (who was very reasonable and understood the situation) was the only thing that worked.
It might not be enough to get them to stop immediately, but it's also useful for several other reasons. It is usually a necessary first step in a real small claims action against them. It's also evidence if you're dealing with a more serious case and want to take formal action over harassment, file for an injunction, demonstrate that the amount is in dispute to make debt collectors go away, etc. Basically, not acting properly on mail sent to your registered address will likely count against you in any sort of subsequent legal dispute.
One thing that I've known several people to do (with considerable success in practice) is include a statement in that letter to the effect that sending that letter is free of charge, but any subsequent actions you reasonably take due to the company's incompetence will incur a clearly stated and proportionate administration fee and/or require compensation for any expenses incurred and other consequential losses. As I understand it, as long as you're reasonable in what you say you'll claim from them, this can be legally enforceable, particularly if the business imposes similar conditions itself as part of its contractual terms, which many do. Certainly I've seen several major businesses end up paying out a small amount of compensation in these situations when the matter was finally settled. This can also be helpful for getting a problem escalated to someone who can deal with it sensibly, because random front-line customer relations staff probably don't have the authority to incur expenses on behalf of the business.
I've been a happy A&A customer for 15 years now. They're not the cheapest, but you get what you pay for. Excellent tech support, no nonsense attitude.
Edit: as an example, a bunch of years back I detected a routing loop. Emailed them the traceroute. Got a response back in a few minutes saying they were looking into it, and it was fixed shortly afterwards. So nice to be able to communicate with someone who can actually fix problems. The only other times I've had to contact them have been related to diagnosing problems in the underlying BT copper (not really their problem), and they were super helpful there too.
I'm with A&A as well and since the mid 2000's. Despite being on Universal Credit due to my freelance biz going down the toilet due to Coronavirus, I'll do my absolute best to stay with them even if it means living off of cheap frozen peas and 50p supernoodles. They're not cheap but they bloody well answer the phone within 30 seconds and their tech support know their stuff. Even in my present crappy financial situation the thought of settling for anything else cheaper from Sky, BT, TalkTalk et al makes me shudder.
(disclaimer, I'm a current customer and have been for a decade+)
They're expensive, they have a data cap (but it's generous), and don't currently offer the higher g.fast or FTTP speeds, but:
- the support is consistently excellent and no-nonsense, and there's no upselling or questionable sales tactics
- phone calls are usually answered within seconds by someone who can actually help and doesn't just have a script, and they'll even give support over IRC if you want
- easy access to extra fixed v4 and v6
- they support the Open Rights Group, and have a clear stance against internet censorship
I've been a customer for over a decade now, and I still have no intention of leaving. Good CS on the odd occasion I need it more than makes up for the cost for me.
Only thing I'd love to see is access to faster FTTP speeds (330/50)!
This lot are my new ISP and I love it. Two phone calls to support on set up day, answered immediately. No support calls since. No peak time drains (that I've noticed). Bit more pricy, but you get technical wizardry and freedom.
One of the biggest resentments I have against Virgin is that you need the business package to support some types of VPN. Like the VPN in use by my lab. Static IPs? Business account. Anything useful? Business account.
That and the woeful password security practices they force on users. Letters, numbers and between 8-10 length? For the account login?!
AA on the other hand will generate a secure and memorable passphrase for you, which you can override but has to be tiptop secure to do that. There's even a button for "whoops, someone else could see my screen, please generate a new passphrase again".
I mean, who does that?! Genius.
Then there's the logs which relate to my account. I can see exactly what openreach have said about work on my account. When an openreach engineer was assigned and exactly what they're doing etc.
Honestly, if I buy a house, a deciding factor will probably be whether I can have AA as my ISP.
AA have a good reputation. Zen do too. I'm not sure why anyone who'd done market research would go with one of the bigger name ISPs these days. Well, OK, I am sure: AA and Zen both tend to be a bit more expensive. But this is one of those areas where you get what you pay for, I guess.
Ironically, the one major exception to this is Virgin, because they do offer an alternative product with technical advantages, whereas almost every other landline ISP is ultimately just backed by the same physical BT infrastructure. But given the speeds you can get in most parts of the country from that BT infrastructure now, the difference isn't going to be as important for most people as it used to be a few years ago.
I'm with Virgin Media (and have been for 20 years) because they offer the best speeds in most parts of the country.
AA or Zen simply can't compete when they are offering FTTC or ADSL.
I don't care at all about customer service. If you're contacting your ISP enough to care about the customer service, they must be doing something wrong.
Virgin Media currently offers speeds of up to 500mbps across their entire network. That will be 600mbps at the start of next month, and it's 1000mbps in some places (such as Reading).
We had a Zen account for a while. They were terrible - absolutely hilariously incompetent at getting us connected, expensive, and minimal bandwidth at busy periods.
I'd used Zen about ten years earlier and they'd been much better, so I was very disappointed.
My experience with Virgin was fine. The product was fast, there were a couple of short outages but no serious technical issues, and I had no problem cancelling when I moved a few years ago.
I'm sorry to hear that. We've been with Zen for many years and through multiple addresses, and the only technical issues I can recall originated with Openreach rather than Zen and got escalated promptly by the Zen support people. Never had a bandwidth problem, and right now we're routinely getting close to the top speeds available with FTTC, even at "busy" times and with the coronavirus disruption. We did have a bit of hassle getting connected the last time we moved, but again I'm not sure whether that was really Zen's fault, because we ended up getting a BT engineer sent out to install some new hardware as well.
It's true that Zen are relatively expensive, though, and their lack of 24/7 support is still well below par. A&A would be the obvious alternative to consider if we were moving again or decided to change ISP for some reason.
Also not affiliated with them in any way, just a happy customer.
Coincidentally, I switched to them once I managed to break free from Virgin. The major selling point for me: Lifetime price guarantee. After being with Virgin for 3 years and tolerating 2 price bumps, that was a breath of a fresh air.
Yes, the speeds are nowhere near what Virgin is offering, but for me, all the speed in the world cannot make up for obnoxious customer service, the terrible security and the shady practices they use to keep you handcuffed to them.
I'm on FTTC 80/20. Their control pages (which are excellent BTW) tell me the VDSL sync speed is currently 72.7Mb/s. They allow you to set an FQ/shaper upstream of the DSL infrastructure. I have the shaper set to 95% of the sync speed. This means I'm trading off 5% of the capacity, but in return I never see any queuing delays in the BT infrastructure. For example, I just ran a ping from my home to my lab across London. With an idle link, I get 10ms RTT. Then I ran a DSL speed test and saturated the downlink. It reports 65 Mbps which is pretty much what I get 24/7. But the real story is that the ping briefly only increased to 30ms just when the speed test started, then dropped back to 11ms for the duration of the speed test. That's really good isolation. Bandwidth is really not a big deal anymore - what matters is latency, but most ISPs just don't get this. Often you need to buy stupid link speeds just to avoid queuing delays. But I find that FTTC is fine for everyone in my family to run simultaneous Netflix sessions and me to videoconference at the same time with no noticable additional latency on my call.
Edit: here's the graphs from the A&A control page for my line for the last week. These are really helpful figuring out what's going on if anything is strange. You can see that the mean RTT doesn't really move off the bottom axis, and the peak RTT pretty much never exceeds 50ms.
http://nrg.cs.ucl.ac.uk/mjh/tmp/latency.png
> We offer both the slower ADSL services and the faster VDSL (fibre to the cabinet) services, FTTP and G.FAST services where available. The package is available with a copper pair or you can use with a phone line you buy from another Openreach-based provider such as BT.
I believe they offer all of them on the open reach network. Simple ADSL, Fibre to cabinet, Fibre to premise and now G.Fast, which is on the order of 100Mbps-1Gbps speeds.
Edit: to clarify, I'm saying they don't singularly operate on the copper ADSL component of the open reach network.
AAISP have been sponsoring our Hackspace's internet for a number of years now and we find them fantastic, friendly and knowledgeable - and they even implement xkcd#801 compliance.
Further more, their stance on internet censorship is laudable ("The Government says we have to offer customers a choice of censored internet. So here's your choice, if you want censorship pick another ISP.")
For people who don't know what the xkcd compliance is:
> The company's owner, Adrian Kennard (RevK), stated in a blog post that as of October 2010 the company is "xkcd/806" compliant, referring to xkcd comic number 806. This means that technical support callers who say the code word "shibboleet" will be transferred to a technical support representative who knows at least two programming languages, and presumably can offer more useful advice than a standard tech support script.
When I cancelled my home braodband contract a while ago (because I was moving), I eventually ended up with a debt collector after me because they had kept billing me. They had also disconnected me, connected someone else at the same property with the same cable, billed them and been paid by them, so they were not only billing me after I had cancelled, they were billing twice for the same connection. I tried csalling their customer services to sort it, they were no help. Eventually one of their agents admitted there was nothing they, or anyone else I could call with a publicly available number, could do.
(Edit: I forgot, I had also sent recorded delivery mail about it, but got no response).
I eventually got it resolved by finding the number for the CEO's secretary or someone, and harassing them about it until they got it sorted.
Now, the same thing has happened with Virgin Media Business at work (I cancelled because it was always going down, including the PSTN phones, the service was awful and we no longer need it - we had it before I joined, they have been billing us for months after we cancelled).
First they said "health and safety", they can't get a man to bring the cable up to 2nd floor. I said fine, how about I buy that cable, I drill my own walls, and bring you the cable down to the ground, can you connect that? "Sure, let's set up a date for engineer visit". All is ready, engineer comes carrying a modem... wtf... you are supposed to connect this to your box outside the property. He goes back, they cancel my request for service outright. I call them, and an utterly rude person tells me that the cancellation is final, there is no one to complain to, I can't talk to his manager, goodbye.
The UK broadband is in such an appalling state, that if you want better than ADSL you have to subject yourself to humiliation by Virgin Media who hold near monopoly over fast (for UK, anyway) lines as BT/Openreach are utterly disinterested in being part of the 21st century.
The day this ridiculous duopoly is broken up will be the day to rejoice! But I'm not holding my breath, this is a 3rd world country is so many ways that matter. (Actually, that's an insult to "3rd world" - there I got an actual 100/100Mbit ethernet connection installed in a matter of days for half the money Virgin is asking for their slowest service).
> The UK broadband is in such an appalling state, that if you want better than ADSL you have to subject yourself to humiliation
Agreed, it is terrible. I ended up going with an enterprise-grade leased line that costs ~400£/month because that was the only choice besides Virgin, but honestly I'd rather be paying that much and know it pays fair wages to honest people then pay less but having it go in scammers' pockets.
Thankfully in London there is Hyperoptic and G.Network who offer real fibre (none of this fake fibre DSL or cable bullshit) at an affordable price (~50/month) so I'll switch to them as soon as they become available.
Paying the equivalent of someone’s mortgage just to be able to get a decent internet connection in 2020 is infuriating.
I would switch to Hyperoptic in a heartbeat but they are not rolling out to north London any time soon. Funny how in Scotland even Vodafone is rolling out a gig network, while in bloody London I still can’t get better than adsl speeds.
If you own your property (or are able to install an antenna), I wonder if you can find someone in a serviced area to which you have line-of-sight that's willing to set up a point-to-point wireless link?
> First they said "health and safety", they can't get a man to bring the cable up to 2nd floor.
I suspect this depends a lot on the installer. When my grandparents had it installed, they ran it up the drive, straight over the top of the house, then down the back wall and into the house there without an issue.
Contrast this with when my parents had it installed (after my grandparents, so we assumed it would be fine) - we had about four weeks of back and forth saying "Hey, you've buried the cable on someone else's land and they're about to dig it up" (instead of following the edge of the property, they just cut diagonally across, and the neighbours had planning permission to build there). They eventually sorted it, but it must have taken a double digit number of calls and threats not to pay. IIRC, they were the only option for >38Mbps service, so we didn't have a great deal of choice.
The thing that kills me with these stories (and if you read the comments there's plenty more) is that customers _remember_. I'll never use Videotron again after the crap they put me through when I cancelled.
I'd love to blame monopolies (sure, pick the other guys, but you'll be back in a few years when they piss you off) but the other big offender here is gym memberships, and there's no shortage of choice there. I think there's at least 4 different brands within a 5 minute drive of my house.
Consumer protection laws should be: You can cancel anywhere you can sign up. You allow new signups online, over the phone, and mall kiosks? Great, you also allow cancellations online, over the phone, and mall kiosks.
When adding a customer exit survey to our cancellation workflow the hard and fast requirements were "you cancel first, you need to understand that the cancellation has been completed. Then we can show you the survey". Don't be jerks, then hopefully people will remember you fondly if they need you later.
> I think there's at least 4 different brands within a 5 minute drive of my house.
And just like with ISPs, all of them are equally scummy, so it is indeed a monopoly/oligopoly of scumminess.
UK has fairly good consumer protection laws, in fact if you express your intent to cancel, they refuse for an invalid reason or ignore it and you cancel the payment and let the "debt" accumulate there isn't anything else they can do besides threatening letters, a black mark on your credit report (which can be removed with enough effort) or debt collectors (who are actually reasonable and will drop the matter once you explain the situation).
They could go to court, but they won't because 1) they know they are in the wrong and 2) it's not worth their time anyway. The mark on the credit report is pretty much the only leverage they have, and unfortunately it works due to most people either being afraid of it or actually relying on easy access to credit.
We've tried to downgrade our Virgin Broadband but never managed to succeed no matter how many times we tried to call. They ask for some passwords, which they are suppose to send by mail but never send it; they ask to verify our identity but always find some reason why they couldn't verify (despite having full access to our account). Every time it's 15-20 min wait in the phone, every time different new BS from a different operator, it's quite infuriating.
Eventually, our contract expired and got auto-renewed to a more expensive one (because the one we were on didn't exist anymore). So every month we're paying for something we don't need, like TV etc, and we don't have a choice because there's only Virgin where we are.
I had the opposite experience with BE when I left the UK. I found out there the account wasn’t cancelled properly and there was an outstanding debt on the account.
I emailed, then they replied and admitted fault, apologised, and refunded me. No sitting in phone queues, no treating me like a criminal.
My only conclusion can be that this is deliberate, and that they get enough extra money to be worth it. There have been similar stories going back decades - their predecessor company, NTL was notorious for things like this (e.g. at a student house in 2003, we moved out and they “cancelled” but kept charging for months, and didn’t pay it back for nearly a year).
They had a terrible reputation even then, but it was that or Sky.
I remember once seeing a commercial for an 'online virtual credit card' website/company? Quick online search tells me there are many providers out there.
As far as I know you can create virtual credit cards on the fly and use them to pay. So you could have one with which you pay your Streaming Subscription, one with which you pay for Cable, et cetera and their pitch was exactly this: You can destroy the virtual credit card and there is no fear of any fees whatsoever, so when you cancel some subscription or something...
I didn't follow up at that time, but made a mental note. Has anyone any experience with such services? It's funny that the 'fear' of cancellations not working and being charged 'unlawfully' was the main pitch in the commercial I've seen. Also funny: Cable and Mobile Phone providers are the same devils in the US than in Europe it seems ...
Typically (in the US) the company that set up the recurring subscription that you pulled out from under them just sends your account to a collections agency. My credit card number changed and the New York Times did that to me.
Yes, with a service like internet you are paying for the previous months service, not the next month so the money is owed even if you cancel the credit card. Netflix bills you for the month upfront, so when you don't pay them simply remove access to the service and you owe nothing.
There are a few options out there and I’ll try to cover the ones I’ve used. Privacy: I’ve used this a few times for disposable cards but they act as a debit card such that withdraw from your bank. There are some goofy limits around making cards but it’s a pretty good service. Citi credit card has one that uses flash for a front end that works great but I believe they’re ending the service soon. Capital One credit card is probably the best out there and uses a chrome extension to generate cards per-website. Stripe seems be testing a solution but for third parties and BoA killed their VCC program last year.
AFAIK in the UK, Virgin Media will open a credit account in your name, which appears on your credit report. So it wouldn't matter what kind of payment you used. Although I think you can opt out of this, maybe.
In the UK you can simply cancel the direct debit (most regular payments in the UK happen using direct debit, not by credit card).
But as far as I understand not paying for a contract may result in damaged credit history, so the mortgage can become more expensive for example; or they may sell your "debt" to some collector company, who may start bothering you (I heard these stories from friends).
So because of these reasons, I decided to try to explicitly cancel the contract instead of just stopping paying them.
Makes sense ; where I come from direct debit is also widely used for such matters. Wouldn't it be awesome if when you stop paying it would simply automatically cancel the contracts within a given time period, no questions asked, no need for any 'credit rating' et cetera ... it sounds like something akin to this would be 'doable' in law? Especially with subscriptions regarding 'digital' services that are renewed on a monthly basis.
> Wouldn't it be awesome if when you stop paying it would simply automatically cancel the contracts within a given time period
It would be awesome, but the very business model of these companies relies on things not being awesome. I can imagine that a significant chunk of their revenue comes from disgruntled customers that have no choice but to pay even if they've been wronged because they don't want the hit on their credit report (even though it can be removed with enough effort).
I actually think that overall the companies probably do lose more money (in both PR/customer goodwill as well as support & debt collection costs) due to these scummy practices but too many people within the company rely on things being the way they are to get paid, so they have no incentive by themselves to improve things.
For example, allowing easy subscriptions/cancellations online would remove the need for a sales and "retentions" team as well as the multiple layers of management above them. Making contracts cancel automatically removes the need for debt collection and all the management around that and so on.
California actually has a law about this now... if you are able to sign up online, you have to be able to cancel online. I know some people who will set their locations to California, and the website will suddenly give them the option to cancel.
I dealt with Virgin's debt collectors twice and they were reasonable and actually offered better customer service than Virgin itself. When I explained them the situation and why I cancelled the payment they immediately dropped the case and I haven't heard of anything since (it's been 2 years since the first case).
Of course, you should always aim to cancel properly, but if the company is intentionally being obtuse and you've made reasonable attempts to cancel "within the rules" then just cancelling the payment is a valid option.
This is absurd and really funny, well meant advice could basically be:
'if they don't make it easy to cancel the service, just stop the payment, wait for the debt collectors, reason with them instead of your provider, they treat you better'
(I am not necessarily recommending that, but ... this speaks volumes)
Please be really careful doing this. Cancelling a payment authority is not the same as cancelling a contract, even if you have a right to do the latter under your terms. If you just stop making payments for something you do owe, you are the one in the wrong, and you can end up with a bad credit history, legal action taken against you, specialists chasing you for the debt in increasingly scary ways, etc.
Credit history and debt collection is fair, but I wonder, how does "legal action" happens considering the customer has already attempted to cancel in good faith?
How do they defend the lawsuit when the customer provides proof that they did a reasonable attempt at canceling within the rules and were stonewalled?
As long as you really have already attempted to cancel in good faith, you should be fine on all counts. The problem is a lot of people will cancel a Direct Debit or use one of these disposable card services and cancel that, and not understand that just revoking payment authority doesn't necessarily end any legal agreement they have. They will still owe the money (and potentially penalties associated with collecting it) if they don't then make some other arrangement to pay rather than terminating the legal contract properly.
When I had an ongoing problem with an ISP that they claimed resolved multiple times in the past, all I had to do was say I was on this website and my issue was immediately escalated and fixed in no time.
Don't be afraid to use the TIO. ISPs get away with way too much crap here, and you'll find all your problems (I'm looking at you Telstra) are magically fixed extremely quickly once the TIO are involved.
In the US I've found Charter, after 6 months, either A. Forgets I own my own modem and start to charge me a rental fee. Or B. Decided that my first 12 month discount is expired after 3-8 months.
With Centurylink they seem to just add random services once a year, and I only catch it after 2-3 months of it being on my bill.
I recently had fun cancelling my Comcast internet after switching to fiber. When asked why, I said "4x the download speed and 20x the upload speed for half the price". The tech just said "can't argue with that..."
Yep, with all the horror stories around retentions and upselling I personally never had any issues in that front. I honestly tell the rep that I have a better deal on the technical level elsewhere (that their offering can’t match) and it was always easy.
See if Andrews & Arnolds would work wherever you move to. I've been with them for a few months now and don't think I'll want to switch anyone else afterwards.
Checking an address on their website will require active BT phone line at the address, but if you call them up they can check the area for you (I did that).
I was asking their salesperson about static IPs addresses and all sorts. Answered every single one of my question with legit technical information.
I was actually speechless at the end of the first call. Was the first time I've spoken to an ISP and had all of my questions answered.
Didn't want a phone line and they didn't require one, 300GB usage as standard per month (can be upped to 2TB for a tenner I think?). They dont filter content on their network either. Speeds are decent enough for one person on FTTC (just got 70Mbps). And apparently they purchase above and beyond the capacity they might need from openreach to avoid peak time drains on the network (I've experienced none).
They also do FTTP as well. Or there's the G.Fast option which seems to be new (wasn't there when I ordered).
One of the things that still amazes me - they send me an pgp signed email whenever my internet connection drops, and another when it comes back online. If it's dropped overnight, I wake up to an email about it!
Then there's the amazing logs which you can see about your order. I can actually see the status of any issues relating to my account -- including what openreach may have logged about it!
Had a dodgy moment when initially setting up the router (unexpected downtime on their end).
Called support and they answered straight away - and it turned out to be the person I was emailing when purchasing my order! Knew I was doing set up, quickly checked logs and we got it all worked out.
No major issues since then. Only issue is the socket in my flat, but that's an openreach engineer job.
Thanks for the feedback. That pricing looks very reasonable & the fact that it comes with a fixed ip is amazing. And the PGP signed email says there are definitely tech crowd at work which is pleasing.
If they've got fiber at whatever place I'll definitely have a good look. Currently on a 1gbps unlimited package so would prefer not to stray too far from that to be honest. Though 500 would functionally be the same I guess
A&A is definitely good but unfortunately they only offer DSL I believe, which is honestly pretty bad compared to real fibre like Hyperoptic or G.Network.
HyperOptic or G.Network I’ve used both currently on the latter.
However you have little to no choice in the UK.
FTTP is only absolve in specific buildings if your building isn’t connected it’s virgin or xDSL via Openreach (pick your ISP at that point however they are pretty much all the same unless you pick Tesco Broadband or some other small scale crap like that so for DSL I would got with Zen or well BT).
The other alternative is a leased FTTP line but you’ll be looking at high 4 to low to mid 5 figures for connecting you plus a hefty monthly fee.
So if you want good fiber for cheap you need to look for properties which are already connected to HO or GN.
I have an FTTP line because there's no other choice. The connection fees were covered by the Gigabit Voucher Scheme which I believe is still around. It's only for businesses, however there is no requirement to actually be trading so you can very well set up a one-man company (12£ fee to companies' house) and then do it.
The voucher scheme covered it for 2,5k which is a bit steep but also not that expensive in the grand scheme of things if you own your property. The monthly fee is around 400/month (unlike consumer plans, those are negotiable, I negotiated mine down to 384/month including VAT).
Yes they do, HyperOptic, G.Networks and Cerberus use CGNAT by default most of the smaller ISPs in the U.K. too do that now ever the largest take on new customers on some packages mostly the bundles via CGNAT.
That said the cost of a real IP address is £5 a month with HyperOptic and I think 40 or £50 a year with G.Network so it’s still cheaper than a VDSL connection despite being 15 times faster unless you are in the 200mbit areas of BT.
I’ll second Hyperoptic. Used them for 4 years now, really happy with the connection. They used to provide free public IPv4, but now it’s £5/month for a static.
In that time they have had a couple outages of a few hours, nothing unusual compared to other ISPs. Their 100 and 500Mbit plans are nicely priced. I went for 1Gbit even though I barely break 300-400 over Wifi, just in case. Plus my previous Internet was an atrocious 6Mbit ADSL1 line which I was completely fed up with, so instinctively just wanted the most bandwidth I could get!
When I was searching for a new flat, I was worried about the lack of fibre.
My new flat is connected to DSL, which has 70Mbps which is enough for 4K HD streaming and practically enough for everything. Even Stadia plays smoothly. Not perfect, but agreeing on DSL option gives much more freedom to choose a flat.
This is why consumers like easily-cancelled subscriptions, which iOS implemented. It was important to implement easy cancellations on iOS to show how you can cancel any time so you're not being defrauded when small utilities, kids games etc discretely charge $500/year with Apple's approval. It's your fault for not canceling the subscription that costs 200x more than the app did last year.
Why not sending a cancellation letter (recommended - not sure what the US word for this is, the kind of letter the other party signs when receiving it and which is a legal way to provide letters) and blocking the payments?
> the kind of letter the other party signs when receiving it
In England this isn't the recommended way to serve legal documents, because the person receiving can just refuse to sign and refuse to accept the letter.
You can send letters and get proof of posting without signed for delivery, and that's seen by the courts as good enough.
I heard that you should write them an email saying that you want service cancelled and if they won't do it, that you will do a charge back on your credit card.
File a dispute with your credit card issuer. Chargebacks are a perfectly valid and accepted way to cancel recurring subscriptions (albeit perhaps a forceful option).
They also have the benefit of putting the merchant in a bad standing. Chargebacks usually incur a fee as well as credit card companies monitoring the chargebacks per 1k transactions. If the number gets too high you (the merchant) will be sanctioned or cancelled.
So please use chargebacks. I speak as a former merchant: We hate chargebacks - they are an effective deterrent.
I had an equally terrible experience with this nasty company.
Been a mostly happy customer for over a year, contract has ran out so I was just paying month to month and didn't "upgrade" to another contract as I knew I was going to switch providers (already signed the contract with the new provider but it would've taken 6 month to actually install it).
Finally new provider gives me an install date so I call Virgin to cancel. First off, despite telling me that the cancellation will take 30 days (as mentioned in every document), I come home to find the broadband disconnected already. Fine, it's only a couple days until the new provider is up and running.
The new provider has an issue and it's going to take another few months to install, so I call back Virgin and ask if they can reinstate the previous connection. They say no so I ask them if they can give me the same plan on a 30-day rolling contract, explaining my situation and that I only intend to use it for a few months until the new provider is up and running (so even if they somehow missed the "30-day rolling contract" part, they would still realize it doesn't make sense to sign me up for a yearly contract given I intend to cancel in a few months). We confirm everything over the phone, the engineer comes in and gives me the new modem (why they couldn't just mail me the modem or let me reuse the old one is beyond me) and all is fine.
New provider is set up 2 months later so I give Virgin a call to cancel. Turns out, not only is my new contract a yearly contract but apparently they've sent me an e-mail stating the new contract and terms and that I opened it, despite the fact that my e-mail client doesn't load remote content so even if I did receive it there would be no way for them to know that I opened it, so they're either lying or they sent it to someone else. I argue with the customer support monkey for an hour and we get nowhere, so I ask them to review the call recordings from the call where I initially set up the contract and tell them to call me back the next day. They say they can't promise that and sure enough, no call back.
I end up writing a complaint letter by post explaining the situation and asking for a call back to sort out the situation, and cancel the direct debit on my bank's side. The letter also states that I will hold the equipment (modem) for a month and if I don't receive a shipping label by then I will discard it. No response despite the letter having been delivered and signed for.
Account goes to collections so I explain the situation to them and they are being very reasonable (you know it's a problem when your collections agency has better customer service than your own one) and drop the matter.
6 months later I get a prepaid shipping label in the mail to return the equipment... well it's a bit too late now though as the equipment is well on its way to the landfill. No news since then and I'm quite happy to never have to deal with that disgusting company again.
There's probably a black mark on my credit report because of this, but thankfully I don't need credit anytime soon so their only leverage didn't work out either. If the mark ends up being a problem I'll get a lawyer to send them a nastygram to get it removed.
i called and cancelled a "no contract" comcast plan one day. it took an absurd amount of time to cancel, and i finally had to yell at someone after being handed off 3-4 times to reps that each tried different tactics to get me to stay. i was able to cancel at some point and received confirmation.
then - no joke - a few days later i get an email that my comcast starter kit would be coming in the mail. THEY signed me back up! i called and it was explained to me as "oh, it looked like someone cancelled your plan in error". i was astounded. they then sent me to a comcast store that had been closed for years to return the modem, which i couldn't ship. i was about ready to throw the modem through the storefront at this point when i finally drove 30 minutes to an open location.
i will _never_ use anything comcast again. i feel so sorry for any poor souls that have no other option. i would not live anywhere it was my only option, that's how much i loathe them.
I’m not sure what that fuss is about. I just stop paying whenever I run into these kind of issues. It’s easier than what people think. I wanted to cancel my gym membership and they wouldn’t let me before I finished my year membership. So I just stopped paying. Some numbers were calling me but I never answer unknown numbers.
To be fair, the credit score is the only leverage these nasty companies have and why they get away with being so scummy and get the customer to bend over for them.
Not giving a shit about your credit score and not living off credit (which is a problem for a ton of other reasons) is the only way to thwart that and personally it's been a highly successful strategy for me.
yeah and it's fine, honestly I don't care if it takes a bit of a dip, don't want to be a slave of that credit score and I'm not planning to get a mortgage.
In order to cancel Mediacom's 'service,' I had to send a letter[1] to them, with copies to their general counsel, threatening 99 kinds of lawsuit. I made the letter intentionally deranged, complete with footnotes about financial BDSM, to give them the impression that I would actually do it. They cancelled the account. It was pretty fun to ignore the panicked calls from their lawyers for a bit too.
Once I had to cancel an entire credit card to get out from under a gym membership.
[1] https://gowder.io/pgmediacom.pdf