Domain: complaintsboard.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to complaintsboard.com.
Comments · 12
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Re:"94% of crashes involve human error"
What's so confusing about this?
"What's the problem, officer? I didn't make a mark on it. I drove right by."
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Re:Give me about 20 minutes
It's appears good, it's cloudflare.com not 127.0.0.1 cloudfront.net
https://www.robtex.com/dns-loo...But does go through a lot of edge servers (can throttle network traffic to adjust loads).
Bail that answer that site is bad news, I posted too early search further I found this dire warning from Domain Registration
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/... and https://www.complaintsboard.co... first two searching eNom Inc.Really sorry about that.
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Re:Get ready for it.
1: Suntrust is deeply, deeply underwater. Texas Ratio of 17+. That means if they went under right now, their creditors, including depositors, would get 5 cents on the dollar. This is a company deeply affected by the subprime mortgage racket, literally they paid a billion bucks to the justice department to settle foreclosing on people's homes they didn't own or have titles to. It is a company that needs to fail and it's current and previous management needs to be imprisoned. http://www.bankregdata.com/all... http://dealbook.nytimes.com/20...
2: This is not just a desperation move, it's almost certainly a move made by an Indian manager, coming from India, where there are no worker protections, and this kind of deal is going to result in a huge class-action lawsuit after a few months or so of "on-call" support. If you are reading this and from sun-trust, call lawyers, get contacts lists NOW, and strategize to get as much money as humanly possible from these scum. Make sure to discuss pressing whatever criminal charges you can as well, make sure to muck up the case where they are assuredly mucking up black-letter FSLA laws. Make sure the world knows if you're an IT manager from Sun-trust that you cannot manage a department competently.
3: Now that I know you are off-shoring IT and are badly underwater, I also know you are probably off-shoring accounting. The problem here for the bank is when the new serfs start stealing things; there's no downside since the Indians don't go to jail since they're remote, and they have all the motive in the world. If you have stock get it out NOW!
.Your post is a bit racist but this explains why they sold my loan. I had an auto loan with them arranged by the dealership (I negotiated the rate down to market rates). I have excellent credit, never a late payment, and my interest rate was fair to them (market rate basically). 3 months after writing that loan, they sold my loan to CSC Logic / aka BB&T, and it seems that I am not the only one they did this to. The paperwork involved for me was a nightmare and I will never use a big bank for a loan again. When your loan is sold, it is rarely to an outfit with good customer service. It's sold to the "highest bidder" which generally means they have low margins and don't spend money on customer service. I couldn't understand why SunTrust would sell my very safe loan, but now it makes sense- they need cash NOW. I'm going to buy a bottle of Don Julio 1942 and drink it on the day they go bust.
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Re:You know what really sucks?
You're crazy. We've reversed transactions at ATMs with our bank where the ATM didn't spit out the money but marked it as a successful transaction
I am not a lawyer, but I believe legally the customer is liable for ATM transactions, except in a case where the card is stolen, AND the transactions happen no more than 72 hours before the report, and then I think your liability is capped at $50. Any reimbursements would be at the bank's discretion, so if you have a good, sympathetic bank(er), like it sounds like you have, you might get off the hook. I've had my fair share of disputes with banks that like to pin things on customers, and they're generally not as cooperative or polite about it.
If somebody, for example, does this or this, and you see it on your statement the next month; or even if you used your card soon after it happened (can't claim the card is stolen) but didn't check your statement online until later that night, you're stuck with it.
I didn't need to do "research" because I had personal experience to back it up, and no amount of research would have led me to your experience. Banks, in general, try to pin these things on the consumer instead of eating the loss, especially Bank of America.
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staples easy tech is just high pressure sales with
staples easy tech is just high pressure sales with real techs forced out.
The thing is at stapes you better sell.
http://paulrepair.blogspot.com/2009/04/stay-away-from-staples-for-computer.html
http://www.complaintsboard.com/complaints/staples-c276403.html
http://consumerist.com/2008/09/why-i-quit-staples-easy-tech.html
http://consumerist.com/2009/12/i-always-look-forward-to.html
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Apple also doesn't do what HP does
Apple doesn't generally treat customers like crap...and their website is checked thoroughly for accuracy. HP is more like this most recent one: http://www.complaintsboard.com/complaints/hewlett-packard-c395157.html
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A warning about 1 and 1
Rarely do I go negative on the Internet. Things said on the internet stick with you forever, but maybe just a warning.
The company 1 and 1 seems to be using a collection agency to leverage money out of previous customers. While they may not be breaking any laws, but they are definitely taking advantage of their customers.
Google: "1 and 1" nco
There are pages of people who have fallen victim to this company.
A good narrative that describes almost exactly what happened to me...
http://www.complaintsboard.com/complaints/1-amp-1-internet-inc-c161434.htmlSorry to post anonymously, I'm not really a coward, but with a company like this, you just cannot be too careful.
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Re:Happened to me
That "smart" scammers have moved to the more unregulated world of cell phone charges. I got a text message from "Gamer data" about some cheat codes out of the blue one day and a 9.95 monthly service charge. AT&T was borderline unhelpful in removing it until I started yelling, I wonder what percentage of that 9.95 they pocket?
The FTC needs to crack down on Gamer Data and the rest and we need regulations that require some kind of authorization for these charges, like an AT&T rep or robot voice calling to verify.
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A vicious cycle
The problem with AV removal tools is that once the infection is in place it's near impossible to run them. (at least in normal mode) The infection will often create restrictive GPO's, a chain of self replicating drivers/ services/ scheduled tasks/ startup entries so that even if one piece is removed it will be recreated.
The best way to remove a virus is from a bootable environment which can remotely bind to the registry. Then it's just a matter of disabling the startup entires, deleting the install directories, removing the GPO's and deleting the malicious services and drivers. You can even run a command line version of the mentioned removal tools in bart pe to get the rootkits and hidden system file infections.
The majority of infections I see are the rogue security software where they infect you then tell you to pay to remove it. What's interesting is the company "witabett" provides technical support for their fake AV products after victims have purchased them! Check out their complaint board it even provides a support phone number... Excellent drunk dialing material for my geeky friends. -
Double Standards...
Quite a ingenius scam really. The following link - http://www.complaintsboard.com/complaints/yourhackerzcom-c141692.html [complaintsboard.com] - suggests that they take your 'hard earned money' and then blackmail you. Saying that they will tell the person you are trying to 'hack' if you don't send them $1000. It made me lol.
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Re:"tricked into"
Here's the one I got messed up in.
The bride tells me we need new curtains for the living room. We surf, and shop, and surf, and shop and end up at JCPenny. I use my debit card and the bride got new curtains.
JCPenny turns around my info to a subsidiary called Stonebridge, and I get spammed for insurance, and other stuff. Other stuff like a bullshit 'membership' which somehow I failed to opt-out of that charges my card $10/mo. Well, 3 months later I finally get that charge removed, with large amounts of swearing on the phone (hey, if 2 months of 'nice' phone calls won't work, break out the profanity).
I still recieve Stonebridge insurance scams in my snail-mail, after months and months of calling them and asking (yep
... more swearing too, although unsuccessful so far).Never do business with JCPenny as they appear to have other instances, and multiple ways to rip you off.
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Re:Further correction
Fake phishing clones of bank sites is the thing I think is only one aspect of the problem.
Also do your homework on any business offering "free credit reports" as well. Seems a lot of those are also phishing and confidence schemes to get your financial or identity related data which they can use to rip you off. (And I say be more wary of the confidence scheme, because the places that are phishing are giving "advice" against phishing and claim to be anti-phishing - which is a lie.) Just because their banner is on a trusted site such as your bank or email service, doesn't mean they should be.
This complaint shows just how far some rip-off operations go.
The thing I'm left wondering is how come sites related to this company and its parent organization are allowed to continue operation when there are numerous complaints of fraud dating back over 2 years, yet places like wikileaks get a court injunction to shut off access? Call me confused!