AOL to pay $3M, reform cancellation policies
Jill Stone  |  by www.theglobeandmail.com. All rights reserved. 16.07 | 23:24

Ingram 2.0: Call it the Vincent Ferrari settlement AOL, the Internet division of Time Warner Inc., didn't acknowledge any wrongdoing in the settlement.

Company spokeswoman Amy Call downplayed the impact of the settlement, saying AOL had already voluntarily improved the way it handled cancellations during 2005 and 2006. This just codifies those safeguards, she said. As part of the settlement, AOL agreed to maintain an online channel for processing cancellations.

Although it has long been one of the Internet's best-known companies, AOL didn't set up an online cancellation system until last August. Previously, all cancellation requests had to be made by fax, mail or telephone. Subscribers who phoned AOL to cancel their service sometimes were greeted by aggressive customer service representatives who were paid bonuses of up to $3,000 if they found a way to retain the business, according to the multistate settlement.

Customers complained that AOL's incentive system created an obstructive culture that made service cancellations difficult. Consumers who called were put on hold or transferred repeatedly until they hung up in disgust, said Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who described AOL's practices as outlandish and underhanded. The settlement requires AOL to issue refunds to consumers who can show they were still charged monthly fees after trying to cancel their services.

AOL's fees currently range from $9.95 to $25.90 per month.

Tiede said the multistate investigation didn't estimate how much money AOL might have to refund. The $3 million settlement will be divided among the 48 states and the District of Columbia to cover the costs of their inquiry into AOL's practices and finance other consumer protection efforts. subscribers, down from 21 million less than two years ago.

Customers have been defecting with greater frequency since last August, when AOL began giving away e-mail accounts and software that was previously available only to subscribers. The decision, prompted by free services from Google Inc., Yahoo Inc.

and Microsoft Corp., removed one of the main reasons many customers had been clinging to their AOL accounts, even if they lived in households with high-speed Internet access. California Attorney General Jerry Brown predicted Wednesday's multistate agreement will minimize the potential for consumer confusion during the transition to free e-mail accounts.

This isn't the first time AOL has run into legal trouble for frustrating customers who wanted to dump the Internet access service. In 2005, AOL paid $1.25 million in penalties and costs to resolve a similar complaint in New York.

In 2003, the company agreed to improve the way it dealt with customer cancellation requests as part of a Federal Trade Commission inquiry into allegations about unfair billing practices. In a separate development, investors hurt by accounting shenanigans that inflated AOL's advertising revenue from 1998 to 2002 will begin to receive payments from a $2.65 billion class action settlement later this month.

The initial distribution of the money was held up last month after a technology company, BizProLink LLC, filed an appeal seeking a share of the proceeds. AOL to pay $3M, reform cancellation policies Astronomers seek help to organize galaxies Microsoft sets tone at E3 Readers to vote on news articles Go to the Technology section Top Stories by Section Report on Business: Alcan shares surge on report of Rio Tinto talks World: Troops clear mosque of all militants Sports: Smyth's Oilers return one of games to watch Technology: AOL to pay $3M, reform cancellation policies Life: Beyond the basic greens Ingram 2.

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Keywords: Attorney General, Vincent Ferrari
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