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Businesses Communications Verizon Wireless Networking

Woman Faces $9,100 Verizon Bill For Data She Says She Didn't Use (dslreports.com) 209

A Verizon Wireless customer says she received a bill of $9,100 for hundreds of gigabytes of data usage which never consumed. The woman told the Cleveland Plain Dealer she was on Verizon's 4GB shared data plan, and like any normal person, the bill of $8,535 from Verizon for consuming 569GB of data in a matter of few days doesn't compute well with her. The problem, as DSLR reports, is that when she tried to find out what caused the data usage, Verizon website told her "the activity you are trying to perform is currently unavailable. Please try again later." She couldn't and switched to T-Mobile, after which Verizon charged her a penalty of $600.
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Woman Faces $9,100 Verizon Bill For Data She Says She Didn't Use

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  • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:03PM (#52902003)
    If $600 is now referred to as a "plenty", what would the $9,100 be?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:10PM (#52902075)

      One and a half decaplenties.

    • A joke
      • A joke

        Sure, coming right up!
        "In Soviet Verizon, data uses you!"
        Or how about
        "I just flew in from Chicago and boy are my arms tired from beating the crap out of these Verizon accountants who tried to defraud me out of ten thousand bucks!"
        That last one's more observational humor.

    • If $600 is now referred to as a "plenty", what would the $9,100 be?

      Depends on the country, but in the US we generally refer to it as a "shitload".

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @04:54PM (#52903721)

      If $600 is now referred to as a "plenty", what would the $9,100 be?

      She should just cut them a check for $91.00 -- they'll consider the bill paid in full.

    • In this case, zero. Verizon reversed the data charges, no explanation.

      link [cleveland.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Thank you for writing the needful.

  • Ignored Messages (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bfpierce ( 4312717 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:11PM (#52902093)

    Or did Verizon not send them. I get these constantly when I'm towards 90% of my monthly allotment.

    • Don't assume competence on Verizon's part. Almost a decade ago a friend of mine got an offer to save a few bucks if she would combine her Verizon cell phone bill with her Verizon DSL bill. She signed up for it, got the first combined bill, and paid it. A few weeks later she got a notice from Verizon Wireless that she hadn't paid her bill. She called to find out what was going on and got the run-around. After enough calls she got someone at Verizon (DSL) to investigate it. They insisted they'd fixed the pro

      • Don't assume competence on Verizon's part.

        Or any traditional career, of that part. I once had a line on central switchboard but was build separately. The phone company screw up royally, charging $1 04 $2 for calls that should have been a dime. My bill was only a few hundred dollars, and even when I got someone to issue a credit (the commercial people insisted it was a home account, and the home people insisted it was a commercial one) it never showed up on my account.I had faxes stating the credit was applied, at one point the CEO's office rep was

    • by sycodon ( 149926 )

      My kid went to Mexico with her boyfriend and his family for the week.

      On Friday, I received three text messages. One stating that the Data limit had been used up and that they were adding more. They second said the data charge was over $1000. The third said that the charge was about $3000 and they turned off the data. All in the span of 3 minutes.

      They wanted me to pay them and I told they to go fuck themselves. It will be off my credit report next year.

      AT&T, fucking you over like no others.

      • That's entirely your and your kids fault, and collections stays on for 7.5 years.

        • by jrumney ( 197329 )

          Somehow you missed where he said "the first message said the data limit had been reached and they were adding more", and the fact that all three messages arrived within 3 minutes. I don't know if any court could hold a customer to that bill, where it is clearly demonstrable that there was a limit in place, and the phone company removed it without authority, and their charges are clearly ursarous if they can reach $3000 in such a short time.

          The problem here is that roaming rates have not changed since the 1

      • AT&T is the worst. They are on my permanant shit list along with DirecTV, Vonage, and Sprint.

        I was house sitting for my boss and taking care of his pets while he went on vacation a while back. He knew that I frequently called my GF in Dominican Republic so he said to feel free to use his land line while he was away but not to spend more than 2 hours per day.

        Well... The first night I called and talked for about 1 hour then the line disconnected. It happens sometimes, the phone company in Santo Domingo is

        • At $12/minute, if you spent two hours per day on the phone with your GF in DR, that would have been $1,440 per day, or $5,760 for four days (you don't say how long you were house sitting but at one line per night, four lines, you must have been there at least four days).

          So I don't understand. If he was billed $2,800 total, that's less than half of what it would have been had you talked for the agreed on two hours per day for four days. In fact it appears that the bill was for one hour per day, which is
  • to go jump in a lake and hich a ride on a slow boat to china, i would NOT fork over that kind of money to ANYBODY, one reason is i dont have it and if i did it would not be going to a god damned phone company
    • to go jump in a lake and hich a ride on a slow boat to china, i would NOT fork over that kind of money to ANYBODY, one reason is i dont have it and if i did it would not be going to a god damned phone company

      Which is all well and good but Verizon will just turn it over to a collections agency and let them deal with it. Then you are well and truly fucked.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:13PM (#52902115)

    Instead of the crappy DSLReport blurb - http://www.cleveland.com/business/index.ssf/2016/09/verizon_data_overages_other_ch.html

  • SpeedTest (Score:5, Funny)

    by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:17PM (#52902161) Journal
    Now we know what happens to all of that data that's routed through /speedtest. [slashdot.org]
  • she was afraid of being put on hold.

  • Verizon Has Issues (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JumbleGuy ( 4683485 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:19PM (#52902185)
    Just about a month ago, Verizon was reporting that my wife had used some ridiculous amount (can't remember exactly how much) of data on her phone. It turned out that both their website & their phone app were reporting MB as GB. It took them several days to fix it.
    • by AntronArgaiv ( 4043705 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:49PM (#52902519)

      Just about a month ago, Verizon was reporting that my wife had used some ridiculous amount (can't remember exactly how much) of data on her phone. It turned out that both their website & their phone app were reporting MB as GB. It took them several days to fix it.

      Verizon should realize that it's unlikely an individual is going to pay an almost $10k data bill.

      So...why do they even allow you to run one up? By default, you should be shut off if you go over "n" times your limit (say your limit is 2G...after 6G, your data service is shut off). That way, Verizon gets their "nominal" overage charges, and nobody's all sue-happy. Why isn't this a thing? If you're some kind of commercial super user, you could sign away that protection, but for 99.44% of their users, it would eliminate this bad publicity.

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      That sounds suspiciously like that old 0.02 cent problem. Wasn't THAT Verizon as well?

    • Had unlimited on two phones and a data card. I was paying about $215USD a month with 700Min and no text. They jacked it to around $265 a month, I called them and told them to put it back. They said they couldn't . OK, Cancel the data card service, I only use it a few times a year anyway and it was only backup internet connection for the girl friends IT job since she works from home. I also went to a 12GB shared data plan and unlimited talk and text as well as tethering on both phones making the data ca
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I imagine some older person on a fixed income could possibly have a stroke or heart attack from shock at such a bill. With all the algorithms gathering data on the data we use, you think they would invest in making sure of, I don't know, umm.. accuracy?

  • sue first (Score:5, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:20PM (#52902199) Journal

    "I told them that I won't pay the bill,'' Gerbus said. "I can either wait until they take it to a collection agency or when they take it to court. Either way, my credit history will be ruined. I can go bankrupt here.''

    It might be wise to consider (or threaten) suing first. Lawsuits bring you to the front of the bureaucracy line, and can resolve the issue without bankruptcy.

    • Re:sue first (Score:5, Informative)

      by networkBoy ( 774728 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:24PM (#52902243) Journal

      That's how I resolved my dispute with Chase bank when they did some seriously underhanded sh!t.
      I told them that they were trying to get blood from a turnip as I would rather burn my money and go insolvent.
      They threatened to sue me, and I replied with: "Please do, I dare you to find a jury that will take your side on this".

      After that my interest rate was 0.00000% till my balance was paid.

    • This. If you just ignore it Verizon, or any company, can just claim you owe any amount of money they want and economically you will owe this until you contest it.

  • they **** you in the *** every time

  • by Anonymous Coward

    You have to very, very specifically _try_ to get that much data on a mobile device. We're talking running torrents, binge watching Netflix 18+ hours a day for the entire month, etc.

    While those things are certainly possible, you don't "accidentally" do them. You might acci

    It's a billing error, and Verizon needs to own up to it.

    On that note: always check your bill, and never, ever let any company have an open ended billing mechanism (e.g. overage charges) against you. Verizon offers "safety mode", you should

  • I don't have to worry If their measurement system messes up and says I used 12ZB of data or I happen to use 5GB on netflix my bill will always be the same.

    It's mostly just better for peace of mind.

  • by jetkust ( 596906 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:35PM (#52902363)
    So Verizon's explanation for how the data got so high is apparently because she accessed Amazon 400 times during that period. So they actually think visiting a website 400 times would account for 560 gigabytes of data? Over a gigabyte per visit. How stupid can they be? More proof that signing up with a company that can just randomly bill you whatever they want is not a good idea. Verizon is stuck in the stone age.
    • If she was streaming a movie from Amazon Instant video that would be just about right.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by jetkust ( 596906 )
        So she streamed 400 movies within the time period of a week or so ...
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          400 movies, 1.5 hours each (average?) - if she was streaming continuously it would take 25 days to watch all 400 movies.

          At 20Mb/s, if each move was on average 2GB, it would take 10 days to stream all the content (not watch, just the time it takes to download over 20Mb/s.) If you have consistent 20 Mbps over 3G, then your speed is better than I get! (Verizon standard LTE is typically between 5 & 12 Mbps).

          So, something is very very wrong, and someone is failing to do basic math verification in their ana

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        She would have to watch several at the same time to manage it within that time period.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )

      So Verizon's explanation for how the data got so high is apparently because she accessed Amazon 400 times during that period. So they actually think visiting a website 400 times would account for 560 gigabytes of data? Over a gigabyte per visit. How stupid can they be? More proof that signing up with a company that can just randomly bill you whatever they want is not a good idea. Verizon is stuck in the stone age.

      AWS.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      At a minimum they should have some kind of customer service flag pop up for agents when an individual calls about an absurdly high bill that's likely to be some kind of billing or data accounting error and that then routes the call to a team that handles them specifically.

      A team dedicated to these could eliminate the usual media clusterfuckery that happens when a carrier blindly tries to enforce not-believable billable and flag that person for the data/billing accounting developers so they could possibly tr

    • There's nothing suspicious about that data usage at all, Mate.

      She was thinking of buying an Amazon Fire TV Stick [amazon.com] and decided to read all of the reviews first.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @02:39PM (#52902415)

    Why not link to the source article [cleveland.com] instead of a summary? It has a lot more detail on what supposedly happened.

  • I have long wanted to be able to place a credit limit on my phone such that the phone company will cut me off when I have reached my limit. Much like the credit card companies do.

    I skirt the issue by using a provider that pretends to offer unlimited voice and data for a fixed monthly cost, but there are still issues of roaming, cramming and the like.

    • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
      Ting allows you to do this. Independently for voice/text/data. You can get a phone that rides either sprint or tmobile depending on the coverage in the area. If you get a nexus, you can get a sim for both providers and switch when necessary (extra 6 per month). Each sim will have it's own number and be treated as a different phone on Ting.

      I used to do this, and forwarded a google voice number to both SIM numbers so I could get calls no matter what network I was on.

      Tings customer service is great too.

  • Impossible (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Mephistophocles ( 930357 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @03:29PM (#52902947) Homepage
    So, at the speeds Verizon provides me, 569 gig in a few days is a physical impossibility. Definitely agree with other posters - sue them for the max amount allowable in small claims court. Bet they settle without you ever actually talking to a lawyer.
    • by Xyrus ( 755017 )

      So, at the speeds Verizon provides me, 569 gig in a few days is a physical impossibility.

      Definitely agree with other posters - sue them for the max amount allowable in small claims court. Bet they settle without you ever actually talking to a lawyer.

      Wow! That's like seven exploding Samsung Galaxy 7's worth of data!

  • 70GB in one day on a phone seems unlikely. So did they mess up the counting? added some other users phones to their account?

  • by meerling ( 1487879 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @04:13PM (#52903387)
    So, does anybody want to run the numbers on 569 gigabytes on a cell phone over "just a few days" ?
    How does that even compare to the max rate of download those things are even capable of?
    Is it based on around the clock downloading which we know isn't reasonable either, especially if there are periods when she wasn't at home or where she could be charging the phone as we know downloading eats up battery at a pretty decent clip.
    This looks extremely questionable to me, and potentially impossible to achieve. (Of course somebody with more specific information could do the calculations I can't, and am probably too lazy to do today anyway.)
    • So, does anybody want to run the numbers on 569 gigabytes on a cell phone over "just a few days" ?
      How does that even compare to the max rate of download those things are even capable of?

      In general some would call that a weak effort [news.com.au]

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