Verizon

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Revision as of 19:46, 20 May 2006 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (sourcewatch links)
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Verizon is a telecommunications company providing wired and wireless telephone services and internet.

Links

Reference

Notes

Verizon is apparently against Internet Neutrality (see Sourcewatch:Network neutrality legislation)

Opinions

Woozle 19:08, 30 Apr 2005 (EST)

We had a very bad experience with Verizon a couple of years ago. I'll try to dig up the details at a later date; this is just from memory.

I accidentally entered an old number for Earthlink's dial-up service into our gateway computer, which (at the time) was pretty much connected to the internet 24/7 via dial-up since we didn't yet have cable internet. Unfortunately, it turned out that this number had, not too long before, been officially moved out of our toll-free local service area and into the non-toll-free local service area. So there was a small per-minute charge for connection time -- something under a penny per minute, I think. There was, however, no change in the way the number was dialled -- you still didn't have to put a "1" or an area code in front of it. So we merrily reconnected to the internet and had no clue we were being charged until the bill showed up next month, with a charge for about $600 of "local toll" calls . They did not list the numbers called, either, so it was only after some investigation that we figured out that it was the Earthlink number.

Upon figuring this out, I immediately checked Earthlink's web site for the latest numbers for our area, and changed the number in the dialler. So now "all" we have to deal with is that $600 phone bill, right? Well... another one came in, now totalling about $1200... but I figured (having to guess a bit, since they didn't list when these diamond-plan calls had been made) that maybe this was the bill for the calls made between the previous bill and when I changed the number. So I took no further action, aside from getting ready to ask Verizon to remove the charge.

And then a third bill came in, and the total was still higher (I seem to recall that it ultimately got to around $3000, though that's inconsistent with the other numbers; as I said, I need to find the actual bills). I frantically double-checked the dialler and found that, of course, my "change" to the dial-up number somehow hadn't been saved; it was still dialling up caviar and truffles for us. This time, after making the change, I rebooted, reconnected, and watched to see that it actually dialled the "new", correct number.

Verizon flatly refused to remove the charge. I wrote them letters, called them and spoke with several different people... no go. (The story of what happened to the charge after that is... another story; it was fortunately on a number which belonged to a former resident of the house, and ultimately not our responsibility, although I did my darnedest to fix the problem anyway.)

Verizon's sins in this case consist of the following:

  • Having such a thing as a "local toll area" which charges for calls without requiring you to dial a prefix ("1" or an area code)
  • Listing only the total of charges for such calls, rather than itemizing
  • Refusing to negotiate

Rating: yuck. Avoid.

Aero 14:18, 1 May 2005 (EDT)

Just thought I'd share some of my stuff on some o' these.

Having such a thing as a "local toll area"

As far as I can see, this is a common practice among local telephone companies. For example, my situ. I go to college in Brockport, within the 585 area code, Monroe County, and Greater Rochester Area. My house is in Penfield, about 40 minutes away, within the same area code, county, and... Area. But my family can't call me from their home, because they have no long distance service (this is intentional, actually, to avoid being stiffed by unexpected long distance charges). Dialing the number doesn't require a +1, just the seven digits; but it's long distance, and were it not for the fact that we don't have long-distance, we wouldn't have known. Nickel and diming! The phone book has a complicated map of where you can actually call 'locally' within your 'local' area.

I was trying to figure out whether or not to get a SkypeIn number in our area code the other day. I was close to making the purchase, except I noticed the numbers being offered had an unfamiliar prefix. (Phone terminology 101: numbers in the US are (AAA) PPP-NNNN where A=area code, P=prefix, N=number.) I did some research and found the prefix was somewhere on the outerlying fringe of the area code, closer to Buffalo than Rochester, and it's not even listed in our phone book! Needless to say having such a number does me no good if people can't call it as a local call.

Listing only the total of charges for such calls, rather than itemizing

I've seen this many times too, especially with cell phone companies. Many of them consider it an extra service (= extra $$$) to itemise! Gee, I didn't know paper was getting so expensive, guys!

Refusing to negotiate

And this seems like pretty much the standard for Corporate America these days. If it was buried in pages of incomprehensible nonsense somewhere, well, it was completely reasonable to expect you to be familiar with it!