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AT&T Disconnects Legal Aid Society for Not Paying Someone Else’s Phone Bill

Phillip Dampier December 22, 2011 AT&T, Consumer News, Video Comments Off on AT&T Disconnects Legal Aid Society for Not Paying Someone Else’s Phone Bill

The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland last week was busily helping desperate consumers against holiday-time foreclosures, disputes with big companies that go unresolved, and those in need of basic legal advice until AT&T disconnected dozens of their phone lines over a billing dispute.

According to the Society, AT&T remotely shut off dozens of their lines over an unpaid phone bill that belonged to another customer unrelated to the group, and the phone company said it could take weeks to turn the phone lines back on.

“If you can shut us down in 30 seconds, why can’t you get us back up in 30 seconds,” Margaret Terry tells WEWS-TV. “I mean what kind of organization are they running?”

So far, AT&T has only forwarded incoming calls to another Aid Society in an adjacent county — one with just four incoming lines.

An 6 o’clock news account of AT&T’s foot-dragging seemed to speed things up.  Company officials were promising a resolution by this morning.

[flv width=”360″ height=”290″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WEWS Cleveland ATT phone service problems 12-21-11.mp4[/flv]

WEWS finds out what the problem is after AT&T disconnected dozens of phone lines belonging to the Legal Aid Society in Cleveland — all over an unpaid phone bill that belonged to someone else.  (2 minutes)

Verizon Wireless’ 4G Wednesday — Network Had More Problems Today

Verizon Wireless 4G LTE customers experienced problems for the second Wednesday in three weeks, as another network outage plagued the “most reliable wireless network in the U.S.”

Verizon officials admitted the outage was a problem early this morning, mostly for 4G customers.  But many LTE phone owners found that switching their 4G phones to 3G service didn’t fix a thing, leaving them once again without any data service.

“When my 4G beacon switched off, the 3G beacon only stayed on a second before it was gone as well,” shares Stop the Cap! reader Roger, who lives in Denver.  “Even when I turned 4G off, 3G just would not stay enabled.”

This problem was remarkably similar to a lengthy day-and-a-half outage that brought down many of Verizon’s 4G customers on Dec. 6 and 7.

“Verizon Wireless 4G LTE service is returning to normal this morning after company engineers worked to resolve an issue with the 4G network during the early morning hours today,” the company said in a statement. “Throughout this time, 4G LTE customers were able to make voice calls and send and receive text messages. The 3G data network operated normally.”

That may be true for 3G-only customers.

Verizon’s second major national outage is starting to test the patience of some of its customers who bought service from the company based on its reliability track record.

“This is a second huge FAIL for Verizon in just a few weeks, and I’m growing annoyed,” Roger says. “I could live with a downgrade to 3G for a few hours, but Verizon 4G phones seem to have a problem stepping down to the slower network when there is a problem with their 4G LTE network.  This means 3G-only phone owners have service as usual, while the rest of us do not.”

Verizon’s 4G network is fast becoming among the world’s largest, and its penchant for service problems during the overnight hours likely means a software upgrade or patch is responsible.  As the update propagates across Verizon’s network, service problems begin to spread from region to region.

As LTE technology improves, Verizon customers are effectively beta-testers and suffer the consequences when a bad piece of software has unintended consequences.

Service credits are available on request from Verizon Wireless customer service.

Frontier Offers Gift Cards in Retail Stores for Online Security Products

Phillip Dampier December 21, 2011 Consumer News, Frontier Comments Off on Frontier Offers Gift Cards in Retail Stores for Online Security Products

Frontier Communications sees itself as more than just a landline provider.  The company has spent years grooming its customer support division into the lucrative business of “on-call technical support” for computer and technology neophytes.  When technical support staff are not helping Frontier’s broadband customers with a service problem, they might be assisting a customer trying to back up (or restore) files from their computer or help with virus or spyware issues.

It all comes at a price, of course — up to $12.99 a month for the “full package” of antivirus software, file backup, and “family-safe” web browsing.

Now Frontier is hoping some of their customers will gift the protection package this holiday season by offering gift cards.  Some 16 Kroger supermarkets in West Virginia will offer two versions — Frontier Secure at $25 for six months and $50 for one year of the company’s “Personal Security Bundle”— a 50 percent discount.

The core of Frontier’s security suite is F-Secure, a lesser-known security package that runs $59.99 a year (direct from their website), for up to three computers.  Substantial discounts can be found elsewhere.

Frontier does not limit the support suite to their customers — anyone can buy-in.  Customers who don’t have a free tech support “agent” in the form of a friend or family member may find the service useful, especially if they require considerable hand-holding.  Frontier certainly finds the product line profitable.  Many customers find themselves attached to at least one of Frontier’s support packages as part of a product bundle, locked in with a 1-3 year service agreement.  Since only a minority of customers may actually require online or telephone customer support, Frontier can book much of the monthly fee as easy revenue.

 

Time Warner Cable’s Annual Holiday Program Disputes: This Time MSG is Threatened

Phillip Dampier December 21, 2011 Consumer News, Video 2 Comments

It’s the holiday season which means it is a safe bet Time Warner Cable is in dispute with at least one of their programmers over rights fees.  This year, MSG Networks is threatening to pull the plug on Time Warner subscribers if the cable operator does not agree to a wholesale rate increase in contract renewal talks.

MSG is letting cable customers know their favorite sports teams are facing a video blackout if the cable operator doesn’t sign a renewal by the end of the month.

Time Warner Cable’s Jeff Simmermon says MSG is demanding a 53% rate increase, and double that if the cable company doesn’t put back MSG Media’s Fuse music channel, which Time Warner dropped in many markets.

It turns out there is plenty of room to negotiate between MSG’s 53% request and what Time Warner thought it had earlier agreed to — a milder 6.5% hike.  Time Warner spokeswoman Maureen Huff said if MSG gets their way, the sports network will become the most expensive channel on the cable dial — an expense that will inevitably find its way into the next rate hike for every cable subscriber.

The contract is due to expire Dec. 31.  Time Warner says it won’t pull the channel from its lineup, effectively daring MSG to block reception by switching off Time Warner’s digital satellite authorization for the networks.

MSG and MSG Plus are in the crossfire, and the biggest impact from the loss of either will be felt in Buffalo and New York City.

[flv width=”360″ height=”290″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WIVB Buffalo Dispute may kick Sabres off Time Warner 12-16-11.mp4[/flv]

WIVB in Buffalo warns Time Warner subscribers to brace themselves for the potential loss of the wildly-popular Sabres hockey team.  (1 minute)

A Personal Note Regarding Our Publishing Schedule

Phillip Dampier December 20, 2011 Editorial & Site News 8 Comments

Regretfully, we have had to place my father in a comfort care home today as we near the end of his battle with cancer. It has been a difficult few weeks, which has made it difficult to maintain an intended publishing schedule, particularly over the last several days.  Readers may find a reduced amount of content published here for a time, as our family works through an especially difficult holiday season.

Your understanding is appreciated.

Updated: 12/21 — My father passed away early this morning and was at peace with the help of the great people at the Hildebrandt Hospice Care Center in Rochester, N.Y.  Our family is very grateful to them and to everyone who shared their well wishes with us.

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