Second Time In 9 Months: AT&T Raises Phone Activation Fee $5, Now Charges $25 (arstechnica.com) 70
For the second time in 9 months, ATT is raising its activation and upgrade fee. In April 2016, the fee for non-contract customers was raised from $15 to $20. Today, it has been raised another $5, from $20 to $25, according to PhoneScoop. Ars Technica reports: As the mobile carrier switched from contracts to device payment plans, ATT initially did not charge an activation and upgrade fee for customers who brought their own phone or bought one from ATT on an installment plan. But in July 2015, ATT started charging a $15 activation fee to customers who don't sign two-year contracts. (ATT also raised the activation/upgrade fee for contract customers from $40 to $45 in July 2015.) The $25 fee is charged for new activations or upgrades when customers purchase devices on installment agreements, ATT says. Customers who bring their own phone to the network are charged the $25 fee when they activate a new line of service, but not when they upgrade phones on an existing line. "We are making a minor adjustment to our activation and upgrade fees. The change is effective today," ATT told Ars. ATT also still charges the $45 activation and upgrade fee on two-year contracts, but those contracts are "available only on select devices."
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No not really all the setup and activation systems are fully automated unless something goes wrong and you have to talk to support.
Porting might still have someone on the other end though I'm not sure about that one.
IME the people that do that don't bother porting their number it doesn't bother them any but it's a PITA for everyone else that's trying to get a hold of them since they have a new number every other month.
My guest guess is the activation fee is just a mislabeled tech support for your new phone
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Then charge for support.
I can type an SIM card number and/or IMEI into a web portal. That portal can check validity and spit out a human-readable answer - invalid number, device not supported, already in use, OK-done. There's zero reason a "typical" activation needs a human involved from the carrier.
Now, if I have problems with reading comprehension and want someone in India to "help" then sure...charge me for the luxury.
Activation fees are virtually always nothing more than front-loading costs to make th
Corporate Arrogance (Score:4, Insightful)
So, why did AT&T do this?
Fuck You. That's why.
Just another example of Corporate Arrogance, demonstrated by yet another Too-Big-To-Fail corporation who struts around with the confidence of knowing consumers won't actually do a damn thing about getting screwed over with unjustified costs that do nothing but line the pockets of the elitists.
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Of course. Asshole Pai is now going to chair the FCC. That means everyone better get used to getting screwed as Asshole Pai absolutely hates consumers. Everything he has done on the FCC has been anti consumer and now he is going to be the chair. Hang on everyone it is going to be a bumpy four years.
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I completely disagree. I blame the Democrats for everything.
I don't blame the Republicans. They're just being Republicans. It's like blaming a rabid dog for biting someone.
But the Democrats brought all this down on us with their shenaningans and their insistence of coronating their queen Hillary instead of working to give us a candidate worth voting for. So a bunch of people voted 3rd-party, or sat at home, and we got this.
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Let's have government set prices! (Score:3, Interesting)
Without the Capitalism in general and the greedy KKKorporation$ in particular, how would the gentle and human-faced Socialism even know, what to mandate?
From flush toilets, to personal automobile, to "EpiPen" — wonderful things get made and offered for sale by the folks seeking to profit from the sales.
Some of these wonderful inventions are then mandated by the government — for example, in most of the US an apartment can not be offered for rent witho
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Yes, and what exactly is the problem with this? If you don't like it, don't subscribe to AT&T. I don't.
Personally, I use Ting. There's no activation costs at all, and I can activate my phone myself from their web site. (Not an employee, just a happy customer.) Why anyone continues to use the mainstream cellular companies instead of the MVNOs I have no idea.
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That's impossible to avoid because there's only 4 networks in the US (Sprint, T-Mo, AT&T, Verizon). All the MVNOs work that way. The difference is that the direct customers of those networks get a worse deal, probably because of name recognition and also because they have to pay for all those fancy brick-and-mortar stores, whereas MVNO customers get a much better deal. The only way it really makes sense to be a customer of the mainstream networks is if you use a LOT of data and can't avoid it. But m
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Wrong.
I specifically pointed out earlier that MVNOs like Ting don't charge activation fees.
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Stupid Slashdot should have a 1-minute edit option...
Also, if you're worried about companies being "morally bankrupt", please point me to any large company that isn't. Such a thing does not exist. If you're going to boycott any company that's morally bankrupt, you're going to starve to death while you live under a bridge.
Why not? They're emboldened by Trump (Score:2)
Do you really think anything will happen no matter what they do at this point? The FCC laid down before he was even officially in office. That lets you know where this is going. Expect the death net neutrality and more bullshit like this very soon.
Fee seems like bad business strategy to me (Score:2)
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How cute. You think other carriers won't do exactly the same thing.
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Except Verizon has the same charges and their's are higher.
Welcome to Canada... (Score:4, Informative)
...like 5 years ago. 10 more dollars and it'll be about what we pay here for activations today.
I activated my own phone on Ting (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only did I port my number over from V$$, but I activated it myself....for nothing...in about 10 minutes online. Since switching to Ting, I save at least $70 a month, and I have no hassles.
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ting is awesome for everybody except those who use a lot of data or still hang on to an 'unlimited' data plan elsewhere.. or only get a verizon network signal (which is a good chunk of rural parts of the country).
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I'd switch (Score:2)
To Tmobile.
Depending on the coverage in your area.
Pretty good service, calling over IP, credits for every line you switch. One line unlimeted 4g hours and texting is like $70 a month tax and fees included.
Fuck AT&T
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The UK also has a population density 10 times more dense than the USA. The problem with cell phones in the USA is that you have to support a huge rural area where very few people live but noone wants to lose signal just because they drive a little ways away from the population centers. Sprint actually covers the population center and major highways pretty well but sucks when you get into rural and even they have tried to cover some of the rural areas.
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You pay the equivalent of $8/month for unlimited 4G?
I call Bullshit. Googling this for 8 seconds it looks like unlimited LTE in the UK is the equivalent of $62-$90.
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I'm on an unlimited data SIM only plan from Three. 40GB/month tethering and free texts as well. £12 including VAT.
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Calls, texts and data with tethering. Doesn't include hookers, so, no, not really a cell plan. /s
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Feeling the AT&T love (Score:5, Informative)
In a small town in Texas, AT&T removed the copper network. Those with POTS lines (nearly everyone as cell coverage is bad at best) were deprived of telephone service. AT&T's response: Here's a free cell phone. Oh, you want it to -work-? That'll cost you - double what your copper line did. More if you didn't sign a 2 year contract.
AT&T also removed the copper network and sold the scrap.
When I say "Feel the AT&T Love" - I'm not talking about the good kind of love.
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That sounds highly illegal. Those lines aren't owned by AT&T as they were paid for by subsidies over the years.
May I suggest ... (Score:4, Informative)
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Is it? Don't the big 4 charge around $20-$30 per line? That's not any cheaper. Project fi is really useful for people who heavily use wi-fi but occasionally need to do some remote web browsing or maps when away from home or work. I personally use a couple hundred megs a month on average as both home and work have wi fi and I do not use my phone as a primary media consumption device. (I don't watch movies on it, etc, I just use it like a tool and only when I need it to get somewhere or call someone)
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Meanwhile, they're losing the most subscribers (Score:2)
They're going to "compete" themselves right out of business. I switched from AT&T to Google Fi, got 5 new phones, and my bill is STILL cheaper!
Stupid (Score:2)
Unlimited plans going up $5....again (Score:2)
My unlimited plan is going by $5. I believe they did this a year or so back too.