FCC Probes Google and T-Mobile For Double-Whammy Fees 127
Julie188 writes "On Monday, the FCC asked Google, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon to explain how they tell their customers about early wireless contract termination fees. Notice that Google is the only handset retailer in the bunch. That's because if someone buys a Nexus One phone from Google with a two-year T-Mobile contract, and the user wants out of that contract, the user is expected to pay two early termination fees. One fee would be charged by Google and a second charged by T-Mobile."
Asking is for chumps (Score:2, Insightful)
If they really want to know how these conditions are presented, it's better that they send in a few investigators undercover and get it all on tape. That way they can cost the jobs of a few lowest-rung minimum wage idiots who are working their ass off for a couple percent commission.
At least they will catch someone. Maybe the FCC isn't familiar with the "exculpatory no". They will become very familiar with it asking the policy makers at these companies, though. So that's nice.
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If they really want to know how these conditions are presented, it's better that they send in a few investigators undercover and get it all on tape.
In the US, the secret police almost never go after the rich and powerful. They're there to keep the dope smoking rabble in their place.
IMO there should be no "undercover agents"; cops should be in uniform. Saying they need "plainclothesmen" or "undercover agents" is an admission of their own incompetence.
Silence has generally been the best policy (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, I think the law requires that the carriers include these early termination fees in print no larger than 3 scan lines to remain on screen for no more than 3 frames during any commercial to be aired between the hours of 3:27a-3:28a... As an alternative, it may be included in the microprint of the signature line of any contract signed by the customer.
For communications companies, they are awfully good at not telling you anything they don't want you to pay attention to.
Re:Silence has generally been the best policy (Score:4, Insightful)
You state that the government shouldn't regulate everything, but then give an example of a benefit of such regulation. Interesting.
I'm not pro-regulation either for the most part, but in too many cases large corporations in the US are unfairly taking advantage of the consumer. As an American living abroad, I'm glad I live in Finland where at least we have some consumer protection, unlike the US. I think a lot of the blame falls to ignorance among the general American populace of what goes on in the rest of the world. The steady decline of "real" news reporting and investigative reporting in the US over the past few decades is huge.
News-tainment and celebrity-worship is the rage these days... sadly.
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Not exactly what I meant. I think this is a case where people should, you know, read the contracts instead of trusting them.
Especially since it is quite expensive going to court. But this regulation keeps lots of people from actually reading the contracts.
So things like "The first 12 month are for 39,99, then you pay 99,99" are quite common, and lot's of people fall for this trap.
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The problem IS the contracts. Unless you just happen to have a legal degree, your average Joe-sixpack consumer cannot decipher them. Obfuscate and confuse seems to be modus operandi when writing cell phone contracts, especially in the US.
I totally agree that reading the contracts is a given for an informed consumer, but unless you are able to understand and comprehend the terms of the contract, you are no better off that the person who blindly sings any piece of paper put in front of them.
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Ok, maybe you are right there. So who do we want to blame? :)
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So who do we want to blame? :)
the french
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Yup - if I SERIOUSLY read every contract I signed it would take me three hours to create a gmail or facebook account. It might cost thousands of dollars for a lawyer to review an agreement of sale or a purchase agreement for a house, if it weren't for the fact that these contracts are standardized. And, why are they standardized? Well, before they were standardized buying a house began to resemble a super-high-stakes version of buying a cell phone or cable plan.
When you only have four companies in a part
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I actually tend to read contracts and find many of them to be amateurish hack jobs that could have been done by an inattentive high schoolers. When I was signing up with a local electric company, the contract I was handed switched the sense of "you" and "we" in mid page. I corrected the parts that made NO sense whatsoever (like where it claimed that I would owe them a pro-rated service refund for outages longer than 72 hours) and struck a few things out that weren't really fair.
After I did that, I signed an
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You state that the government shouldn't regulate everything, but then give an example of a benefit of such regulation. Interesting.
As an aside to TFA topic, I will add my two cents to this.
Contracts are already burdened with government intervention. Breaking a contract is a civil offense, while engaging in fraud to get citizens to sign contracts that have terms they would not have knowingly agreed to is a criminal offense.
It is because the government already intervenes that many people sign hard to understand contracts, because after all, its supposed to be criminal to fuck people over with intentionally confusing bits.
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Now if that enforcement had any teeth we'd be golden! It doesn't mean much when corporations caught in a criminal act get fines costing less than the profit from the act.
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You state that the government shouldn't regulate everything, but then give an example of a benefit of such regulation. Interesting.
Saying government should not regulate everything is quite different from saying that government shouldn't regulate anything. Lots of things should not be regulated, but many others should be.
News-tainment and celebrity-worship is the rage these days... sadly.
It's easier to control an ignorant populace. The people who own the newspapers are the same people who own the politicians
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For communications companies, they are awfully good at not telling you anything they don't want you to pay attention to.
Of course they are, they stick marketing professionals on the team that makes these to make sure you don't read it. From the fees being in super small print in some vaguely titled paragraph of the contract to the notices of changes to your account being on the back of the second to last page of your monthly bill it is all been carefully designed so that the vast majority of people never ever read it.
It is the same reason that when your credit card changes terms you get a separate letter which looks like ju
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You miss the point of the small print. The small print is REQUIRED by law. Rather than having a * and saying "Restrictions apply, see store, website or whatever for details" they are require to shove all the terms right there on the screen. And it is often too much info to fit in, so they shrink it to fit.
IMHO, if you don't know what you're signing, then don't sign it.
T-Mobile? (Score:5, Insightful)
When I went to my nearest T-Mobile store to sign up for service for my N900 they seemed to have no qualms over activating my device despite the fact that it allowed me the freedom to install whatever software I felt like it on it.
Now, from the very frequent stories I see posted here related to the iPhone and Android, I have been gathering that the same does not hold true for those devices.
In fact it appears in many cases that owners of those devices are subject not only to the whims of carriers, but the device manufacturers themselves.
So really, what is the problem here? You buy it, you do want you want with it. You lease it, you do want they want with it. Seems to me that somebody wants to muddy the waters between ownership and rental.
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That kind of depends on how well you and your friend... "get along".
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Wait until nearly everything moves to the cloud and unless you hack your device all apps will have to be approved before you can use it.
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Wait until nearly everything moves to the cloud and hacking your device is irrelevant.
Re:T-Mobile? (Score:5, Insightful)
So really, what is the problem here? You buy it, you do want you want with it. You lease it, you do want they want with it.
Trouble is, the way phones are typically sold - free or heavily subsidised as part of a service contract - is closer to leasing than buying. Since this is the dominant business model, it has a splash back on the way manufacturers design their product, even if you buy it "naked" (I have a nasty suspicion that it also means that "naked" phones are sold at artificially inflated prices to make the subsidies more attractive...)
It also depends on how you perceive phones: if you buy a general-purpose computer, you expect it to be a universal tool that you can freely program or install software on and still enjoy the manufacturer's support. If, however, you buy a washing mashine and try and convert it to use dry-cleaning solvent you accept that, if it blows up, that's your fault. When phones were just phones, they clearly fitted into the latter category. Smartphones are in a bit of a limbo: people want to run arbitrary software on them but they also expect them to perform reliably as a phone.
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Trouble is, the way phones are typically sold - free or heavily subsidised as part of a service contract - is closer to leasing than buying. Since this is the dominant business model, it has a splash back on the way manufacturers design their product, even if you buy it "naked" (I have a nasty suspicion that it also means that "naked" phones are sold at artificially inflated prices to make the subsidies more attractive...)
Couldn't agree more, but still even if the cost is inflated one would think that freed
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I guess the analogy to the phone market doesn't quite hold, other than the merchant ripping off the consume
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You don't have to ask the bank's permission before you can put new wheels on the car.
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It's not really leasing since you aren't paying down the depreciation and returning the phone when you're done.
(a) I said "closer leasing than buying" not "exactly like leasing".
(b) How much is a typical smartphone worth at the end of a typical 18 month contract? Or, more precisely, how much would it be worth if the carriers demanded that every phone was returned and the market was flooded (rather than the minority which currently get sent to money-for-old-phones services)?
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If a smartphone is designed correctly .... i.e. securely, then the part that is a phone (connects to the network, makes and receives calls) should be protected from the rest of the device, which runs the OS, applications, etc.. which simply asks to make a phone call, shows the networks status, get notified of incoming calls, texts, etc ....
If this was the case then the Smart part of the phone could be open, but the iPhone and the Android phones do not appear to have this separation properly done? So they
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Actually, android does have this separation. The radio interface is a separate firmware blob, and this is not open source. Some people have tinkered with it slightly (mainly to fix compatibility issues with changes to the rest of the OS), but for the most part it is a black box.
When you think about it phones have a practical need to isolate these kinds of functions anyway. The phone has to continually interact with the cell network to detect incoming calls/etc, but that doesn't require all the hardware u
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Actually, android does have this separation. The radio interface is a separate firmware blob,
Which might stop people hacking the radio and causing the downfall of civilization, but doesn't mean that the phone will still work (or the media player will play without skipping) if the CPU and RAM are saturated by too many multitasking fart apps.
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Yup - I can certainly vouch that this is the case. My biggest pet peeve is that I don't have any control over whether services run short of using a task manager to manually kill them.
Note to devs: you don't really HAVE to have a service for every little thing you write. Let me choose whether I need my weather updated every 30 seconds or whatever...
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The problem is the Android framework requires the use of services for any nontrivial background task. The issue with this is, many developers are not managing their service's life cycle properly.
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Now, from the very frequent stories I see posted here related to the iPhone and Android, I have been gathering that the same does not hold true for those devices.
In fact it appears in many cases that owners of those devices are subject not only to the whims of carriers, but the device manufacturers themselves.
I've had no trouble with my T-Mobile G2 (aka HTC Hero). Initially T-Mobile blocked the app store until I went into my account settings online to confirm I was over 18 (weird parental controls) but after that I've had no problem installing 3rd party software, using free tethering etc.
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Seems to me that somebody wants to muddy the waters between ownership and rental.
A lot of somebodys, and they're almost all corporations. The record companies, for example, call their wares "intellectual property" as if they own the works. In the US at least, constitutionally they don't. Mankind owns this "property", they merely have a "limited time" monopoly on it, just as someone who rents a house has a limited time monopoly on its use.
Movie studios, OS and games and other applications companies do the sa
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When I went to my nearest T-Mobile store to sign up for service for my N900 they seemed to have no qualms over activating my device despite the fact that it allowed me the freedom to install whatever software I felt like it on it.
Now, from the very frequent stories I see posted here related to the iPhone and Android, I have been gathering that the same does not hold true for those devices.
Even with AT&T, I had no real problems using unlocked devices on their network. Heck, they once even gave me an unlock code for my Blackberry since AT&T has agreement with RIM to do that if asked. They closest they came to a problem was when I was reporting a network outtage in my town, they prefer I report it with a known + locked phone so they could be sure it wasn't just my unlocked phone crashing lame, but I still had a 2+ year old AT&T phone lying around). I was the first to report, but
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They do write letters to people who use iPhones without the iPhone plan (I know someone who has received such letters). However, I suspect that here are a number of legal barriers against auto-billing for them, including, probably, agreements related to GSM.
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I have a Motorola Droid with Verizon and I've been able to install any application I wanted to. What are you referring to when you say that you can't install software on an Android phone?
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I run my own Android build based on AOSP on my G1 on T-Mobile. They don't care, why should they?
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You signed the damn thing without finding what remedies the other parties had against you? Oh wait, this is how we got into the whole mortgage fiasco!
Bingo! The one area where I really support regulation is full, clear disclosure. Require that, and then enforce the contracts. If people are too lazy or unconcerned to read the contract, that is NOT the fault of the other party, nor should the government come in to rescue them from their foolishness or laziness.
The key is requiring that the terms be laid out plainly and clearly. A table showing total cost of the contract (less any add-ons that you might make such as buying things with your phone, etc)
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Oh wait, this is how we got into the whole mortgage fiasco!
We got into the mortgage fiasco because we allowed the mortgage companies to take out insurance on their losses, in effect letting them eat their cake while still having it. The mortgage companies were in a position where the only way they could lose was for the insurance companies to go bankrupt.
AIG should have been allowed to fail.
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Not only were they allowed to insure their losses, they were allowed to take HUGE risks and then fraudulently represent them as minimal risks when they resold them.
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1) The lenders were allowed to do as you say, as well as play all sorts of other shell games. NINJA (No Income, No Job Applications) being a big one. My wife worked at a lender. There is no question that the lenders knew that they were frequently committing fraud. We had many a conversation where she would call me up and tell me that she was refusing to do work, and that she may get fired over it, because she was told to commit crimes. Luckily, she did not have to
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You should have been modded up.
I actually blame government. The primary cause was that the things you mention should not have been allowed to happen, and it's part of government's role to not allow things like that to happen.
Are they going to go after Amazon too? (Score:2)
If you buy a subsidized phone from a 3rd party retailer ( not the carrier ) they only get their money if you stick around for a while on your contract.
Amazon has a similar policy, dinging you $250 on a Blackberry from AT&T:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=cell_dp_activationLink?ie=UTF8&docId=508597 [amazon.com]
What's interesting, is Amazon's policy doesn't say anything about dodging the fee if you return the phone.
Cell phone bill of rights... (Score:1)
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How about DirecTV? (Score:2)
I recently went to cancel DirecTV service - which I've had for more than a decade, only to find out they tacked on a $400 early termination fee. This had nothing to do with an agreement that I signed or ever verbally agreed to. It's just a tactic that they used to try to prevent me from leaving. The problem is that they can add on these fees and demand payment and in absence of payment, they'll affect your credit. My only solution is to go to small claims, which will cost me $75 + time and energy. Most
Fees, fees, fees! Wheeeee! (Score:1)
Double ETFs (Score:1)
As a previous sales rep for an authorized reseller for a big cell company (in the US and not for T-Mobile), I have to tell everyone that whenever an authorized reseller sells a phone to a customer, that customer has 2 contracts. One with the cell company and another with the company selling the phone. The cell company's contract is like usual, with the deal about their etf (early termination fee) and the company that sold you the phone has a contract usually stating something along the lines of: if you canc
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Oh, forgot to mention, Google would be an authorized reseller if you are going through them to upgrade to the Nexus One or if you are getting a new plan with them. For those of us who bought the phone at the full cost, we have no etf with google (but depending on your cell plan, you may have one with your cell service provider).
Re:Fuck Google (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sick of it being painted as some knight in shining armour company that shits butterflies and rescues kittens in it's spare time.
To be fair, if you compare all of the services it provides for seemingly gratis, it's understandable why people have such a love for Google. I think the love for Google runs deeper than other oft-followed companies.
This whole issue strikes at the core of a bigger problem: the generally fucked state of cellphones in the USA. I expect stupid termination fees, simply because we do the entire cell phone business ass-backwards compared to the rest of the world.
So, as much as I love Google, if it has to eat it in the courts a little bit to start fixing our fucking cell phone industry, then so be it. Doesn't mean I don't enjoy the hell out of my free Gmail, Google Voice, etc...
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People don't want to buy a cell phone. They don't want to buy a service. They want both.
If they wanted to buy a phone, they would buy the phone, then look for service provider. The problem here in the US is that you can buy a phone that your preferred provider cannot support (CDMA vs GSM).
In other countries, you buy your phone, buy your SIM card and pay for your service as part of that contract, because they all run on the same basic system.
And while you may think we're backwards, it doesn't matter what you
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I suspect most people would love to buy a phone, then pick a service. It's just not feasible in the U.S., however, because:
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seems pretty simple to me.. make a phone that can use both 3g frequencies and supports both GSM and CDMA.
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They call these "World Phones" because they operate on quad band GSM.
CDMA is going the way of the dodo (hopefully). I like my Verizon phone, because I don't have problems with 3G coverage where I am. GSM pretty much sucks around these parts.
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The problem is, as I said, the chipsets don't exist. There's quad band GSM, but for 3G on both networks in the U.S., you would need a six-band chipset and appropriate antenna hardware. Also, any design you build that covers so many frequencies would likely result in compromising signal strength.
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Re:Fuck Google (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but I've got no sympathy for people who sign up for a subsidized service and don't read the conditions.
The time to complain about a contract is BEFORE you sign it, not after you decide you want to back out of it.
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I dunno - it isn't typical practice for consumers to get charged TWO sets of termination fees - so unless they're both relatively small and add up to a typical fee this could easily be seen as misleading if it wasn't CLEARLY stated.
Also - it is almost impossible to get an unsubsidized service in the US - at best you can pay the subsidized rates and just not get the subsidy. This is showing the slightest signs of changing, but we're a long way from where we need to be.
Honestly, carriers should be banned fro
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Is that available on all plans? Ie, for any subsidized plan, is there an unsubsidized equivalent for $20 less? Does the math work out OK for family plans?
From what I've seen most of the unsubsidized plans are a lot more limited - maybe fine for somebody 22 years old and single, but often not a right fit for a lot of people.
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Re:Fuck T-Mobile (Score:2)
The time to complain about a contract is BEFORE you sign it, not after you decide you want to back out of it.
Yeah, thats great and all, but I had a contract with Powertel and it got bought by T-mobile. I met the obligations of my contract and T-mobile still hit me with a $400 disconnect fee. I never paid it, they sold it to a collections agency and I explained what happened. Every so often it gets bought by a new collection agency and I send them a letter explaining that that debt is not valid and will never be paid.
What really sucks is that they have "automatic rollover" in most contracts. So that once you
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Not that this would help you - unless the court gets the credit agencies to expunge your record.
Credit reporting laws are WAY too lax. If somebody merely claims you owe them money it makes you a credit risk, regardless of the merits of the situation. When a bank has thousands of people asking to borrow money, why would they even bother to investigate whether you're really a risk when they can just charge you a higher rate?
That collection is going to cost him money every time he borrows money for any purpo
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I tested this out just now, the problem was it is presented far into the deal, IE they convince me I want it with the highlights and the advantages, I feel like we have a verbal contract minus some legal crap. So I decide yes, sounds good I go through 3 more pages and then fill in all my personal information, then I am finally presented with a little tag "agree to tmobile contract" [google.com], read the contract... oh $200 early termination that's reasonable check and move on. Credit card details, choose your plan...
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Yup - if I had my way I'd have a law passed: In addition to unbunding phone subsidies and plan costs, I'd also rule that customers cannot be charged more in a month than the lowest price quoted in an ad for the service they have. If you need to charge 37 different "recovery fees" that is fine - just include them in the advertised price.
I'd also let the customer name his maximum bill at the time the contract is signed, and the telco cannot ever exceed it (without agreement in advance in writing - naming a
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I'm sorry, but I've got no sympathy for people who sign up for a subsidized service and don't read the conditions.
Yes, because I'm sure you've read and fully understood all the fine print on every contract you've signed. What a fucking moronic thing to say. Tell me, if one of your contracts insisted that your family was to be sold into slavery, would you have no sympathy for yourself? People like you enable companies to screw people.
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Yes, because I'm sure you've read and fully understood all the fine print on every contract you've signed.
Yes I do. Reading and understanding the document is a prerequisite of signing it. Can't be much plainer then that.
Tell me, if one of your contracts insisted that your family was to be sold into slavery, would you have no sympathy for yourself?
Now THAT is a moronic thing to say. Firstly - If I had read the contract I would not have signed it. Secondly such a contract would be illegal even if I WAS dumb enough to sign it.
People like you enable companies to screw people.
No, people who don't read contracts allow companies to screw them. Common sense says a corporation is not giving away expensive gadgets because they want to be your friend. Before you even look at the contract you shou
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Yes I do. Reading and understanding the document is a prerequisite of signing it. Can't be much plainer then that.
You are quite simply and plainly a liar. There are not enough hours in the day to read every contract you have to. Important contracts, sure. But every EULA for every piece of software? Gimme a break.
Now THAT is a moronic thing to say. Firstly - If I had read the contract I would not have signed it. Secondly such a contract would be illegal even if I WAS dumb enough to sign it.
Not moronic at all
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You are quite simply and plainly a liar.
You have quite plainly demonstrated that you are a douche, but not why I must be a liar. I can't think of any software I use that came with an EULA, although I usually read the license it comes with if it is new to me. For example, the GPL took me 3/4 of an hour to read 8 years ago. I don't have to re-read it every time I install a new package.
But the rest of your rant makes no sense. Where did you get the idea I was for abolishing the protections that exist? How does suggesting that people be responsible f
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You have quite plainly demonstrated that you are a douche, but not why I must be a liar.
Here's the thing, I'm not getting personal when I call you a liar. I simply do not believe that you could possibly have read every document. You're just name calling when you call me a douche. I don't suppose you'll see the difference but that's your problem.
I can't think of any software I use that came with an EULA, although I usually read the license it comes with if it is new to me. For example, the GPL took me 3/4 o
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I'm not getting personal when I call you a liar. I simply do not believe that you could possibly have read every document. You're just name calling when you call me a douche.
I'm here to tell you that when you call someone a liar it is deeply offensive. You are claiming (without any well founded reason for doing so) that I am dishonest, directly impinging my character. This is such a dangerous thing to do that people often end up in court for it.
On the other hand, by calling you a douche I was invoking a common term for somebody behaving in unpleasant and abrasive fashion, and since that is what you were doing by calling me a liar in a public forum, was entirely warranted.
The od
It's in black and white (Score:2)
Note that Google recovers $350 + $179 from T-Mo, which is identical to the retail cost of an unlocked phone, or $529.
T-Mobile recovers the $179 paid by the customer up front, plus $21 = $200, . Probably T-Mobile gives the $179 back to Google, and keeps $21 for itself as its little punitive termination fee.
Probably, Google/T-Mo came up with this policy to discourage people from buying the subsidized phone, then walking away
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Someone help explain this to me. What is the difference for an end user with a subsidized phone. If you buy an unlocked for (say for $500), in order to you that phone on a cell network, you still have to sign a contract for $x a month.
If you buy an locked phone (say for $300), you are automatically signed up for a contact for $x a month.
Is the contact cost less if you purchased the phone outright (unlocked?)
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Is that how it works across all carriers in the US? You basically get a reduced monthly cost if you buy the phone outright?
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What happens when you've paid off the subsidized cost of the phone? Do you continue to pay the higher monthly cost, or does the monthly cost drop to 'non-subsidized' monthly costs?
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Someone help explain this to me. What is the difference for an end user with a subsidized phone. If you buy an unlocked for (say for $500), in order to you that phone on a cell network, you still have to sign a contract for $x a month.
If you buy an locked phone (say for $300), you are automatically signed up for a contact for $x a month.
Is the contact cost less if you purchased the phone outright (unlocked?)
The difference can be more or less the features on the phone due to the branding.
Many phone companies (including T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon) work with the mobile phone makers to have custom software for their network - branding it for them. Most non-contract phones in the US are simply unlocked but still branded phones. In some cases, you can get it without the branding entirely, but it can be a little more difficult - you really have to be careful when buying the phone.
If you can avoid the brand
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So what are the cost benefits of an unlocked iPhone for example? There is no change in software. Do you get a cheaper rate from AT&T if you buy the phone outright? I'm still not seeing much benefit from what I see here.
Perhaps it's just not being explained very well, and I didn't see any options on AT&T's site for non-subsidized phones. They all seem to require a contact when you start using AT&T.
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So what are the cost benefits of an unlocked iPhone for example? There is no change in software. Do you get a cheaper rate from AT&T if you buy the phone outright? I'm still not seeing much benefit from what I see here.
Perhaps it's just not being explained very well, and I didn't see any options on AT&T's site for non-subsidized phones. They all seem to require a contact when you start using AT&T.
You can't buy it unsubsidized from the cell companies, at least in the US; you have to go to the manufacturer's website, e.g. Apple, Motorola, etc.
The primary benefit is you can take the phone to whatever carrier you like - no contract restrictions. Then you also have the ability to do more with the phone as you please - e.g. features that carriers may disable, etc.
On the other hand, you will have zero (or at most very minimal) support from the carrier for the phone.
Re:But where is it mentioned? (Score:2)
where did you find the link to that? I went to http://google.com/phone [google.com], no link their. I selected the tMobile plan, get a new page, still not linked that I could find. Select to purchase, couple more pages enter name, credit check... agree to tmobile contract ($200 early termination clearly spelled out.) STILL NO MENTION. What once I have transferred my number would the tell me?
Re:Someone put a gun to my head and made me sign i (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
You are paying T-Mobile for the loss of money from the contract .... and possibly a subsidy on the handset?
Re: (Score:2)
However, you didn't get the phone for free - you paid $180 for it.
So, if you cancel your plan after three months and keep the phone your cost for the phone is 350+200+180, and in addition to this you paid extra for a few months towards the hardware (since the plan includes a recovery cost).
I'm sure that T-mobile also charges some kind of activation fee, so it isn't like they have all kinds of administrative costs to deal with (assigning a new number, etc), and even if they were it wouldn't be hundreds of do