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Man Gets $62K Bill for Mexican 'Wall-E' Download



Next time you are traveling abroad and feel the need to download a movie, you may want to think twice. If you don't believe us, just listen to the sad story of this man that called into CNN to chat with Financial Expert Clark Howard.

The caller, whose name is Alberto, was on a trip to Mexico when, as a gift for his nephew, he downloaded the film 'Wall-E' to his computer. Alberto, who used a mobile broadband card from his wireless carrier to perform said download, assumed everything was fine. He was wrong.

Upon returning to the States, Alberto received a bill from his wireless carrier requesting that he pay a total of $62,000. Alberto, stunned at the amount demanded in the bill, protested to his wireless company. The company -- which has remained unidentified -- relented and gave him what it considered to be a break. It dropped the bill from $62,000 to $17,000. We're sure that made Alberto's day. We can only hope that Alberto's nephew enjoyed what would have to be the most expensive movie-viewing of all time.

Let this man's misfortune be a lesson to the rest of us. Use mobile broadband cards carefully, or suffer the consequences (as in, bankruptcy). [From: CNN and Arstechnica]

Cell Phones, TV, Mobile Phones

Mom Gets $50K Bill After Teen Downloads 'Lost' via Cell Phone

Teen Downloads 'Lost' Episodes Over Cellular Modem, Mom Gets $50,000 Bill
Remember last year's tale of the unfortunate (and unidentified) public servant who managed to rack up a $200,000 phone bill by downloading numerous movies over a non-unlimited cellular data plan? His wasn't the first such outrageous bill we've seen, nor even the second, but at least he can take solace in knowing he won't be the last, with news coming of a Spanish city councilwoman receiving a $50,000 bill courtesy of her daughter's downloads (technically, the woman received a bill of around 40,000 Euros, which converts to around $50K, according to El Mundo).

This woman has a Wi-Fi network in her Madrid aparatment, but the daughter was unable to access it from her bedroom consistently. So, she started using mom's 3G cellular modem, provided by the municipal government and paid for on a per-kilobyte basis, to download television episodes like 'Lost.' Many, many shows and gigabytes later, the mother was presented with the resulting bill and has pledged to repay the council. We hope the daughter at least foots a portion of that -- and that she has a better idea of what's going on in 'Lost' than we do. [From: El Mundo, via Fox News]

Read more →

Cell Phones, iPhone

Man Gets Slapped With $85,000 Cell Phone Bill


If you thought absurdly high and encyclopedia-sized iPhone bills were the only game in town when it comes to ridiculous cell phone charges, you were sadly mistaken. In fact those 300 page, $3,000 and $4,000 iPhone bills have nothing on what some poor Canadian oil field worker was charged by Bell Mobility.

After picking up a new phone that he could tether to his laptop and a $10 unlimited data plan, Piotr Staniaszek decided he wanted to do some downloading -- everything from HD movies to applications to watch and install on his PC. What happened next would have put most of us at the Switched offices in a body bag following a heart attack. Piotr got slapped with a $60,000 bill! Confused, he call Bell Mobility's customer service department, which informed him that it had made a mistake... his bill was actually $85,000!!

How Piotr wasn't immediately moved to violence we'll never know, but he was probably using more exclamation points than we are right now.

It turns out that he was being charged on a per-kilobyte basis because his unlimited browsing plan didn't cover using the phone as a modem. As a "goodwill" gesture, Bell Mobility has dropped the bill to measly $3,243.

Staniaszek plans to fight the bill saying he was never informed about the restrictions on his wireless plan. That said, he's coming off rather lucky, considering many U.S. wireless carriers strictly forbid downloading of movies and other high-bandwidth items over wireless broadband networks.

Do you think it's fair that this poor Canadian man was charged even $3,243, or should he have read the fine print?


From The Register



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