Comcast Consumer Lawsuit Isn't Going Away
Comcast Consumer Lawsuit Isn't Going Away
Everybody loves to hate on Comcast. The telecom giant saw an unwelcome addition to its club of naysayers in early August. Bob Ferguson, the attorney general of Washington State, filed a lawsuit which has refused to shrink. He claims the company deceived a half-million customers in the Pacific Northwest, refusing to change its ways until receiving an invitation to a Seattle courthouse. Today, the judge presiding over the case declined to toss out the Comcast consumer lawsuit, which might cost the multi-service provider up to $3.6 billion in penalties.The Attorney General made his case based on a multitude of complaints. Subscribers who opted into a protection plan were promised home and office service calls free of charge. The so-called “Comcast Guarantee” has netted hefty profits since at least 2011. For only $4.99 per month, customers were told they’d receive a sort of equipment and reliability insurance, covering the cost of an employee working with wires and correcting outages.Ferguson and his team charge that the product Comcast offered was not what it delivered. All the guarantee apparently netted was a free-of-charge visit – if a router was damaged or a handful of cables needed replacing, a bill would be sent soon after the technician departed. Sometimes even the house call by itself would be rung up or compensated by fees.Taking a look at the terms and conditions of the agreement does little to reduce confusion. The language Comcast used to detail the benefits and limitations of its Service Protection Plan seemed intentionally designed to obfuscate its shortcomings and play to its few strengths. Consumerist published a screenshot of the SPP’s definitions, terms, and conditions, as originally shown on the Xfinity website. Nine paragraphs are what it apparently takes to establish what customers are actually paying for, with many sections of the T&C referring back to others.
Xfinity Terms and Conditions; paragraph numbering from The Consumerist, Xfinity
Sources
https://consumerist.com/2016/10/03/comcast-fights-back-against-washington-states-potential-3-6b-deceptive-service-plan-lawsuit/Comcast sued for $100M by Washington state AG, alleging 1.8M violations of consumer protection lawHow Comcast convinced customers to buy “near-worthless” service plansWashington state judge keeps alive $3B consumer lawsuit against ComcastWhat is the Service Protection Plan?
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.