So I just got my monthly cell bill and just about shat a brick when it was more than double what I usually pay. I checked the details on the web-billing application my service provider has us use and it tells me that I downloaded more than my data cap (which is 500mb per month) on the first day of billing so any data at all I used that month was billed at like $0.15/mb.
The only time I'm rough at all on the data usage is days where I tether my phone at work when my testing box needs the ethernet cable, and even then it's just reading newsfeeds/pa forums and avoiding anything like streaming videos/audio. I'd estimate on those days I'd use a maximum of 100mb of data. Evenings and weekends I don't even use data on my phone at all. My problem is that on my bill it shows me downloading l 526mb over a 5 hour period starting at around 5:30.
This is the first time I've ever had to dispute an erroneous charge on a monthly bill before and I'd like advice on how to get to the bottom of this. I'm afraid if I call them up without a strategy here it'll just be my word vs their log files word and they'll just tell me to shove off.
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Who knows, maybe they browsed something by accident? I know I had a phone call charge on my bill for like $30 once. Turns out I pocket dialed a friend in London England. It caught her machine, and my pocket managed to leave a 5 minute message.
Xbox Gamertag: GAMB1NO325Xi
Use your regular usage as a guide.
The potential loss of a customer (especially a long-time one) is worth more to them then a single month of overages.
I've ran into this several times with several different companies for various things. If you otherwise have a long standing account with no previous issues the rep almost always gives you a one time freebie and then make a notation of it in your account so that you can't abuse the freebie repeatedly. I usually don't even get a chance to argue or really contest an issue before they try offering the 1 time pass.
If you really think it's their error and you want to contest the data records, then by all means, do it.
Eh.
As someone who's taken more of these calls than he wants to think about, the "threatening to switch" tactic really doesn't work. It's something a customer service rep hears multiple times a day and very seldom does someone actually carry through with it so you get a bit numb to the threat. Especially if there's an ETF involved.
Approaching it from the aspect "This usage is unusual and I don't recognize what it might be based on the time it happened - can I get some clarification?" is a much better approach.
Also - was anyone else potentially using your phone during that time frame? Generally when I've researched these types of issues, it's turned out it was something like Youtube where usage came from and some additional probing turns up that someone else did have access to the phone.