Online Investigation
Need to cancel your ISP or online dating service? You may need to watch out, according to Tom Spring of PC World. He created accounts with major Internet companies like NetZero, Match.com, Netflix and the dreaded AOL (our experiences trying to cancel with this ISP still leaves us with cold sweats!) and then tried to cancel them a few weeks later. The results are, sadly, not surprising.
To evaluate how difficult canceling an online service can be, I signed up for and then canceled 32 accounts, each at a different site. About a third of the services in my sample made the seemingly simple goal of canceling very hard to achieve. Not all of my experiences were negative. Services such as a monthly New York Times TimesSelect online subscription and a monthly Consumer Reports Online account took only minutes to cancel and without lingering strings.
And the worst? NetZero according to Tom:
It took me less than 5 minutes to sign up for a NetZero dial-up Internet account. But after canceling that account, I spent a week trying in vain to reverse a charge that the service levied after my cancellation request.
I had to call NetZero a total of five times, holding for several minutes and then enduring long and fruitless conversations with company agents every time I called. According to the NetZero representatives that I spoke to, I needed to talk to a supervisor to arrange a credit, but none was ever available when I called. In the end, I gave up and let NetZero keep the money.
Canceling True.com was bad--but botched billing, long and frustrating conversations with customer service reps, and supervisors who were never available when I called made NetZero my worst cancellation experience - PC WORLD
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