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    Class Action Suit Accuses Microsoft Of Double-Billing Customers For Xbox Live

    Shu
    Shu
    Celestial Council
    Celestial Council


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    Registration date : 2008-03-31

    Class Action Suit Accuses Microsoft Of Double-Billing Customers For Xbox Live  Empty Class Action Suit Accuses Microsoft Of Double-Billing Customers For Xbox Live

    Post by Shu Fri Aug 12, 2011 6:46 pm

    Class Action Suit Accuses Microsoft Of Double-Billing Customers For Xbox Live  Xbl



    An Xbox Live customer has filed a class-action suit
    against Microsoft, claiming the company renews subscriptions and
    double-bills its customers without consent.

    Indiana-based plaintiff Ryan Graves claims in the filing [PDF] that Microsoft's pre-paid subscriptions are "governed by vague and onerous terms of use," says the Courthouse News Service.

    Graves explains that in his own particular case, he let his Xbox Live
    subscription expire by declining to update his credit card information;
    when he renewed his account several months later with a new credit card,
    Microsoft charged him for both a new subscription and the subscription
    that had previously expired.

    According to the court filing, Microsoft told Graves that the issue was
    "not a mistake," and said he would receive two years of Xbox Live
    service, as the charges covered both his manual service renewal, and his
    pending automatic renewal from the previous subscription.

    Graves refused to accept Microsoft's response, as he says did not order a two-year subscription.

    In the class-action suit, Graves seeks restitution, statutory, treble
    and punitive damages for breach of contract, unjust enrichment,
    conversion and violation of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act, and wants
    Microsoft to "reverse all unlawful, unfair, or otherwise improper
    charges, and to cease and desist from engaging in further unlawful
    conduct in the future."

    Earlier this year, PlayStation 3 manufacturer Sony became embroiled in a class-action suit,
    as the Rothken law firm accused the company of harming its 77 million
    PSN customers in "one of the largest data breaches in the history of the
    internet."

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