Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 1:58:14 GMT -5
It's virtually impossible. It says to contact an e-mail, but when you click the link to an e-mail, it's just a dead link.
I finally get the e-mail from the phone, which told me I had to e-mail, and for some reason could not do it over the phone. So I do, and there has been no response for over 3 weeks now.
All I wanted was the free trail, and now it seems I am stuck with it for 6 months. I'll close my debit account, before they charge me for a service I don't even want
Is there goal just to scam people into keeping their account?
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Tony Schiavontay
Dennis Stamp
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Post by Tony Schiavontay on Jun 8, 2014 2:13:46 GMT -5
Well, as far as I know, signing up is a six month commitment.
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Post by The Trashman on Jun 8, 2014 2:54:38 GMT -5
There is no cancelling. When you signed up it was for 6 months. You can decide whether to let it auto renew or not but you are locked in.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 6:08:12 GMT -5
I was so frustrated with it that I cancelled my debit card and just got a new card from the bank. WWE has since emailed me stating my card couldnt be charged and my account has been suspended.
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Post by Amazing Kitsune on Jun 8, 2014 10:42:06 GMT -5
Don't let the WWE get Jerry McDevitt after you.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 10:45:33 GMT -5
I think WWE made it pretty clear that when you signed up it's a 6 month commitment. They said as much in every ad I've ever seen.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 10:48:01 GMT -5
As everyone else has said it's a six month commitment, your best bet is to make sure that you don't have it set to auto-renew and then don't reactivate it again when your deal is up.
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Hawk Hart
Bill S. Preston, Esq.
Sold his organs.
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Post by Hawk Hart on Jun 8, 2014 11:05:16 GMT -5
I enjoy this thread about a minor breach of contract. If you signed up day one, you're obligated to pay for all six months. WWE may have written an extenuating circumstances clause written in but it seems highly unlikely. That's something people need to realize, when you sign up for something like this and agree to a six month commitment then you are legally obligated to hold up your end of the deal as long as they hold up theirs, ergo since WWE Network is still active, if you signed up for a subscription day one then you are legally obligated to pay for them because subscription required a six month commitment.
Think about it this way, how f***ing embarrassing is it gonna be when WWE sends your $9.99 bill to collections and you have to pay interest on one month of WWE Network service because you didn't wanna fulfill your contract?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 11:20:44 GMT -5
Think about it this way, how f***ing embarrassing is it gonna be when WWE sends your $9.99 bill to collections and you have to pay interest on one month of WWE Network service because you didn't wanna fulfill your contract? What's to make you pay it? I am not sure what debt collection is like in the US, but here unless its money owed to government debt collectors have f*** all power. All they can do is knock your door and ask for the money.
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Hawk Hart
Bill S. Preston, Esq.
Sold his organs.
The Best There Is, the Best There Was, and the Best That There Ever Will Be
Posts: 15,296
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Post by Hawk Hart on Jun 8, 2014 11:27:04 GMT -5
Think about it this way, how f***ing embarrassing is it gonna be when WWE sends your $9.99 bill to collections and you have to pay interest on one month of WWE Network service because you didn't wanna fulfill your contract? What's to make you pay it? I am not sure what debt collection is like in the US, but here unless its money owed to government debt collectors have f*** all power. All they can do is knock your door and ask for the money. Unpaid debts accrue interest if handed off to a collections agency and weigh heavily against your credit score. Not just debts owned to the government, I recently found about a magazine subscription in my name that went unpaid for a decade and when I paid it my credit score raised 25 points. Basically, depending on WWE handles debt collection and I have no doubt they'll send this sort of thing to collections, not paying for one or more months during the six month commitment opens you up to having to paying more in the end for potential interest as well as the potential damage to your credit score which then affects stuff like the ability to get a loan or credit card. To put it other words, $9.99 is not worth the headache not paying could cause.
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keezy
Dennis Stamp
full time slacker
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Post by keezy on Jun 8, 2014 12:54:50 GMT -5
According to www.wwe.com/subscriptions/billingYou should be able to 'cancel', but it's just you paying the rest of your commitment in one payment and you will still have Network access until then, but you only have 7 days to do it.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 13:00:33 GMT -5
UPDATE
I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up.
That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced.
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Hawk Hart
Bill S. Preston, Esq.
Sold his organs.
The Best There Is, the Best There Was, and the Best That There Ever Will Be
Posts: 15,296
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Post by Hawk Hart on Jun 8, 2014 13:05:20 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced. Yeah, sure is hard to prove that it was you that provided your personal contact and banking information and addresses related to such.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 13:05:29 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced. was going to say the something similar considering information like your social security number is not exchanged.
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Chip
Hank Scorpio
Slam Jam Death.
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Post by Chip on Jun 8, 2014 13:08:42 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. Past having billing information, card details, your ISP having history of you receiving data from the Network and the fact it detects your IP?
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Post by Magic knows Black Lives Matter on Jun 8, 2014 13:14:32 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced. LMAO, what a heel. You basically gave your word that you would give WWE 60 bucks over the course of six months in a mutual agreement and now you are backing out of it. You are in the wrong here dude. I don't care how many attorneys you talk to, you are bailing on a clear agreement.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 13:15:20 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced. Yeah, sure is hard to prove that it was you that provided your personal contact and banking information and addresses related to such. Still not legally binding. Only way it would be, is with a signature. It's WWE's own fault for trying to enforce something they legally can't.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 13:16:33 GMT -5
UPDATE I am close friends with my family's attorney. Just agreeing to something online is not legally binding, because no signature was ever asked for. There is literally no way they(WWE) can prove it was you who signed up. That's why ALL other video subscription services have no commitments. There is absolutely no way it can enforced. LMAO, what a heel. You basically gave your word that you would give WWE 60 bucks over the course of six months in a mutual agreement and now you are backing out of it. You are in the wrong here dude. I don't care how many attorneys you talk to, you are bailing on a clear agreement. I only wanted the TRIAL.
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Post by Magic knows Black Lives Matter on Jun 8, 2014 13:18:34 GMT -5
Yeah, sure is hard to prove that it was you that provided your personal contact and banking information and addresses related to such. Still not legally binding. Only way it would be, is with a signature. It's WWE's own fault for trying to enforce something they legally can't. It became binding the second you gave them your credit card information dude. You gotta take an L on this one, you willingly got locked into a six month commitment.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2014 13:20:30 GMT -5
Still not legally binding. Only way it would be, is with a signature. It's WWE's own fault for trying to enforce something they legally can't. It became binding the second you gave them your credit card information dude. You gotta take an L on this one, you willingly got locked into a six month commitment. Except I legally didn't
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