LoneGunman said:I should have realised much sooner that this is why they're wanting 'requests for extra bandwidth' in writing - without any mention of their abritrary disconnections.
Its a legal con, that they're currently doing - and they're covering their own asses against any future actions. 'Disconnections? What disconnections? These are just requests for extra bandwidth!'
Mercury said:I would change this to something like. "I therefore make payment under protest and with full reservation of my rights." But then what do I know, I am not a lawyer!
Ok, officially a long post with the quotes, but I think WBS' purpose of requiring the faxing a letter is to legally cover WBS' rear end, and they might try and use it in court if sued - claiming that it was a sort of admission of guilt on the customer's part, thereby opening up the possibility that WBS might counter sue for the amount GBs that customers used before their accounts were suspended. Just a thought, so be careful about the wording...LoneGunman said:In pure legalese - and bear in mind I'm a layman - the previous paragraphs referring clearly to the disconnections as being the real reason, and the reference to these being 'arbitrary' and drawing attention to Ibursts choosing to require a so-called 'request for extra bandwidth' for the return of Internet Access - is almost shouting about the clear illegality of their actions and this submitted request, but doing it in quiet legal-style language and tone. A Judge would like the fax, in other words![]()
Sorry Savage - you snuck that in there, basically what Savage said...savage said:Paying is like admitting guilt yes. Pay WBS and you are admiting that you are wrong and WBS is right. For what it is worth, I'm DAMM glad I didn't go the WBS route - although they modem fees is enough already to put me off it for good.
Sorry to hear about all the troubles, but good luck - it makes for good reading![]()
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