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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers
- Path: sparky!uunet!boulder!bobk
- From: bobk@hopper.Colorado.EDU (Bob Kinne)
- Subject: Prodigy Scam
- Message-ID: <1992Aug21.235622.21361@colorado.edu>
- Originator: bobk@hopper.Colorado.EDU
- Sender: news@colorado.edu (The Daily Planet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hopper.colorado.edu
- Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder
- Date: Fri, 21 Aug 1992 23:56:22 GMT
- Lines: 24
-
- In 1990 I was persuaded to subscribe to the Prodigy service. I
- soon found it to be of no particular value, mostly advertising of
- the junk mail type. Therefore when my subscription period ended,
- I let it lapse. Silly me, wasted my money. End of story, you say.
-
- NOT!
-
- About a year after the subscription ended, I received two threatening
- notices from a "Great Lakes Collection Bureau", which claimed that I
- had incurred a 'debt', and made unspecified threats as to what would
- happen if I didn't pay this 'debt'.
-
- Of course I have no intention of paying, and have informed the
- 'collection bureau'. I have also asked the Postal Service to
- investigate and (I hope) prosecute.
-
- The best (perhaps the only) way to keep companies on the legal and
- ethical track is to punish them severely for leaving it. In the
- Republican era, our Federal government isn't very interesting in
- doing this. That leaves it up to us, the consumers. I suggest
- strongly that all netters avoid "Prodigy" and not encourage this type
- of scam. I also note that Sears and IBM are the parent companies of
- "Prodigy", and it wouldn't be a bad idea to refrain from doing
- business with either of them as well.
-