Read this, any comments...
http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/05/08/microsoft.bestbuy.reut/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/05/08/microsoft.bestbuy.reut/index.html
He has not been unable to get a full refund from either company, his attorney Anthony Lee of San Francisco told Reuters.
call this lawyer and hop onto the lawsuit, these two companies will settle out of court and you will have yourself a ton of extra money and maybe some cool stuff from best buy.Originally posted by zarathustra
This happened to my dad. He has been trying to figure out why he has been charged MSN access on his card (he uses a different ISP).
The funny thing is, I was there when we bought his new computer (an HP). The salesperson kept asking us if we want an MSN subscription, or trial. And I told him we already have an ISP. He kept pushing and I kept telling him we don't want it. Before we got into a fistfight, my dad said for him to just give us "the damn disc".
A few months later: an MSN charge for 21.95. And it's been going on for a while. My dad keeps telling the credit card company that this is a service he did not use, and he will not pay it. So the credit company now has to battle MSN.
I believe this happened to many more people, but most are just too oblivious to realize they are being torn another one. They think: it's Microsoft, I must have it, I guess.
It's only after we make of impulse buy and opt-in to the service contract do we realize that the service contract infers that superior product they sold up is a piece of crap.Originally posted by Doctor Q
It's not quite as bad as the MSN scam, but it bugs me that Best Buy, and its competitors too, train their salespeople to tell you how great a product is, and then, after you decide to buy it, do their best to sell you a service contract, implying that the product is flaky, prone to problems, or otherwise an untrustworthy investment without a ready source of repair.
Originally posted by zarathustra
This happened to my dad. He has been trying to figure out why he has been charged MSN access on his card (he uses a different ISP).
The funny thing is, I was there when we bought his new computer (an HP). The salesperson kept asking us if we want an MSN subscription, or trial. And I told him we already have an ISP. He kept pushing and I kept telling him we don't want it. Before we got into a fistfight, my dad said for him to just give us "the damn disc".
A few months later: an MSN charge for 21.95. And it's been going on for a while. My dad keeps telling the credit card company that this is a service he did not use, and he will not pay it. So the credit company now has to battle MSN.
I believe this happened to many more people, but most are just too oblivious to realize they are being torn another one. They think: it's Microsoft, I must have it, I guess.