COMCAST – XFINITY: Anti-trust? Too big to care? The only game in town!

Let's end cable company's ridiculous price schemes and poor service.One of the primary reasons this blog exists is Comcast, Xfinity, or whatever the name is on our ridiculously high monthly payment.

I began sharing the issues we were having with this monopoly on Facebook and Twitter and was surprised to find others with identical complaints.

The issues are many and complex – we  will share them as we explore resolutions.

First though, is it Comcast or Xfinity? According to their own website:

Comcast and XFINITY. XFINITY is the next generation of revolutionary TV. With XFINITY TV, you get more free On Demand choices than with any other provider. You can instantly watch TV shows and movies in HD on any TV or stream them on your computer, tablet or smartphone.Aug 14, 2015

Comcast_XfinityHuh? So, which is it? Does each service have a different name?

In our area, Comcast …. umm …. Xfinity … err …. Xfinity from Comcast … uh… well Comcast/Xfinity, is the only option we have for internet.  For television, the only
alternative would be to install a dish and that’s something we are not interested in doing.  The lack of competition doesn’t stop them from sales techniques that should be allowed only when competitors are available.

I intend to begin what I’ve threatened to do for years, Continue reading

Labor Day Weekend: Lowest gas prices in years! How can YOU find them?

GAS PRICES ARE THE LOWEST FOR LABOR DAY WEEKEND SINCE 2004!

It’s Labor Day weekend … if you are planning to join the thousands who are setting their GPS’s to destinations near and far, here are a few sites and apps to help you get the best prices for gas to get you there. For that matter, even if you are staying put this weekend, these links are great for your day-to-day-go-to-work-school-errands etc.  Regardless, lower prices are out there, you just need to tools to find them.

Use these websites and apps to find the cheapest gas near you any time of the year. Continue reading

The tools are available to stop robocalls, so why do so few telecom’s use them?

Contest Winners Ethan Garr and Bryan Moyles at DEF CON 23

Contest Winners Ethan Garr and Bryan Moyles at DEF CON 23 from FTC’s website

Why aren’t telecom companies giving us the tools we need to block robocalls?

For the past two years the FTC held contests at the international DEF CON conference, the worlds largest annual hacker’s convention held in Las Vegas, awarding prizes for the best and most effective tools to fight robocalls.  According to the FTC, last year the contest titled Zapping Rachel, named for one of the most prolific robocalls in the country, the familiar  “Rachel from card services,” was a big success:

Zapping Rachel marks the latest step in the FTC’s ongoing campaign to combat illegal, pre-recorded telemarketing calls known as robocalls. The contest challenged participants to design a robocall honeypot which is an information system designed to attract robocallers, and help law enforcement authorities, researchers, and others gain enhanced insights into robocallers’ tactics.

Three hackers were awarded prizes for their creations help officials capture these robocallers.

This year at the 2015 DEF CON 23 hackers were awarded prizes for creations that include programs that can be used by consumers. Continue reading

ROBO CALLS: More than an annoyance, they put you at risk

RachelCardServicesTelemarketers aren’t simply the annoying dinner-interrupters they used to be.  Things have changed. There are fraudsters out there on the other end of these calls who can go so far as to manipulate recordings of your voice, then use those recordings to take over your accounts. They use programs that “spoof” phone numbers – making your caller ID show fake numbers that appear to be cell phones, local calls, 800 numbers; they  even spoof your own phone number – all to get you to answer the phone and talk to them.

The FTC advises you to hang up on these calls, don’t speak to them.  But, this advice is a couple of years old.  Did you know those phantom calls, the one’s you answer and no one is on the other end, are the first step for many of these fraudsters? According  All Tech Considered author AArti Shahni, just answering those calls can put you on a list of live bait for scammers:

Here’s an experience some of us have had. The phone rings. You pick it up and say “Hello. Hello. Helloooo.” But nobody answers. It turns out there could be someone on the other end of the line: an automated computer system that’s calling your number — and tens of thousands of others — to build a list of humans to target for theft.

Collecting numbers that reach live people is the first step.  After your number is established as a working number, next come Continue reading

Are You a Victim of Zombie Debt Collectors and Debt Scavengers?

zombieHave you received a notice from a Debt collector insisting you owe a debt long forgotten, long paid, or perhaps you’d never heard about?

You may be the victim a Zombie Debt Collector!

Are you being told that even though you don’t remember, paid or never heard of this debt, a debt collector is willing to make a deal with you? Pay us half of what you owe (plus fees of course) and we’ll call it a day.

The Zombies are after you.

This article is available via one of the best resources for people who are inclined to challenge banks, debt collectors, or any aspect of consumer relationships, NOLO.com.

One of the most important pieces of advice anyone will give regarding debts Continue reading

The Bank Cancelled My ATM/Debit/Credit Card – WHY?

“We apologize for cancelling your cards. The cards were ‘flagged’ due to a ‘breach.’ No, we can’t tell you Who – When – or How.  Have a nice day and thank you for banking with us.”

Credit-Cards-Generic---27777673Has this happened to you?  What are your rights in this situation?  Does it matter to you how your credit, debit or ATM card/account was breached?  Do you have the right to know which merchant allowed an account to be breached?  Suppose it was the bank itself?

The following is my personal experience.  A separate post about what I did to address this issue will follow.  If this has happened to you, I encourage you to read the second part and take the same steps I took.  If these incidents aren’t addressed with regulatory agencies, the secrecy behind these breaches will continue and we will continue to be inconvenienced, or worse, we will continue to be at risk of having accounts compromised without knowing by whom, how, or why.

DECLINED. DECLINED. DECLINED.

It was a late sunny and hot Tuesday afternoon, summer was at it’s best. We had family visiting and we were all piling into cars, moving from enjoying a beautiful day at the ocean to joining friends for a boat ride on the the lake. A perfect summer beach day was becoming a perfect summer evening on Cape Cod.

My husband asked me to put gas in the car on my way to the lake.  I pulled up to a pump and inserted my card. Declined.  I tried using it as an ATM. Declined. I knew exactly how much was in my account, I check my accounts online just about every day. The message on the pump read, “See the agent inside.”

The clerk apologized, ran my card through, and told me to try to pump gas.  No luck.  “Try a different pump,” he told me.  I drove to a new pump and inserted my card. Declined. The clerk came out and Continue reading

It all started with a $500 late fee

American Dream?

The American Dream?

Yes, a $500 late fee … that led to a long drawn out fight with the national bank who bought the little community bank that we signed a mortgage with in 1987. The case is ongoing and has taught us lessons about “allowed abuse,” how to report abuse, how to file complaints and the complex ways banks operate that may violate rules and laws that we aren’t expected to know about or understand.

We knew we were paying late. We knew a late fee, as written in our original mortgage contract, was due. That original agreement states that if we were late, we’d be charged no more than 3% of a monthly payment and states that this is reflective of state law.  We were shocked to see a $500 fee added to our statement as a “late fee.” That was in 2007. We refused to pay that fee. The bank continued to add fees because we refused to pay. They claimed by not paying those fees we were in default, threatened us and in 2008 began seven years of abusive treatment that included pre-foreclosure actions while adding fees and fines that now total over $6,000 – money that we do not intend to pay.

We’ve watched the laws change and learned as we watched the process of change, that what has been done to us by this company is in fact, illegal and each and every complaint we filed became part of a larger pattern that drove changes in mortgage regulations. But we live in a non-judicial foreclosure state and when a bank retaliates by filing documents that suggest foreclosure, even if you are people – like us –  who makes your mortgage payment on-time every month, it’s up to us to take the case to court.

The bank and their staff of lawyers can Continue reading