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Amazing that a company that turns over billions on data contracts can't put a real-time billing system in place. I suppose "can't" is the wrong word, it should be "don't want to"There will be real time billing if everyone goes on to topup or prepaid.
Why? Some people don't mind being fools?Then Vodacom should stop selling post paid contracts.
Depends from which side you're looking!How about Vodacom becoming more responsible for their lack of control over data usage on contract? Rather than fixing it the responsibility gets pushed down to the customer? Clearly something is wrong with this picture.
I don't know whether VodacomData feeds back to management or not. If he does he must be terribly frustrated as it seems he's ignored more often than not...In my opinion as the "inside man" on the forum as much as you are Vodacom's eyes and ears you also need to be the forums voice back to management. This cannot go on any longer. Vodacom's lacklustre attitude towards this problem over the years shows that it does not care for its customers nor the pain they go through when these things happen.
I don't know whether VodacomData feeds back to management or not. If he does he must be terribly frustrated as it seems he's ignored more often than not...
i agree... If you have the records on file, but cant provide the customer the information, then why are you keeping it on file??
Or just try to be more responsible with data usage , i work for Vodacom and i am paraniod about data usage.
Do you have any idea how and when I use my data? Or where I am irresponsible? No you don't, so you are not quite in a position to make comments like that. Working FOR vodacom doesn't mean you know anything.
Thanks for the suggestion. Will give that a try. But I'm still interested to know how often this happens and whether people manage to prove themselves innocent.
I'm in the process of trying to sort out a problem with Vodacom, whereby they have billed us over R14,000 for our monthly data usage. We know that this is completely impossible*.
On mentioning it to some friends via Facebook, it seems that we are far from alone with this situation - one mentioned she had to pay R6k when Vodacom "proved" that she had overused on her data allowance, another paid over R2k, another R17k (I think that might have been voice roaming rather than data). All three dispute that they used the data/made the calls, but Vodacom insisted that they must have either had a virus or someone else had used the data/phone. My friends gave up and paid.
I'm not going to give up because I KNOW I'm right. But I'm worried now - has anyone ever taken Vodacom on about something like this and WON?
* Proof that it's not possible:
We are a wireless internet provider. It's a MyMeg500 contract and we only use it rarely as a backup when all the ADSL lines go down (it's attached to our load balancer as a failover). Last month, the ADSL lines all went down for approximately approximately 20 minutes on one day. Only one of our customers is configured to use the failover and they are aware they must only use it for email - they were alerted to this at the time as a reminder. The rest of the time, the 3G modem was not in use - we have logs to show the data usage was less than 100Mb during the ADSL outage. Nobody has removed the 3G modem and borrowed it - it would be a sackable offence. According to Vodacom, it was used for around 2 hours on a Saturday (this is BS - it hasn't been used at all at a weekend) and 9Gb was downloaded in that time. Again this is BS - where we live it isn't physically possible to squash 9Gb down the line within 2 hours - and there is no record of this kind of throughput on our logs.
Despite all this I'm worried that Vodacom will force us to pay to retain the service - pay now and we'll sort it out later, that kind of tactic. But more than that, I'm outraged that Vodacom can bully customers into paying for something they didn't use. If we were not a service provider, we wouldn't have the means to prove our innocence. I am a freelance writer and I'm seriously considering writing an exposé on this. Stories and perspectives welcome...