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Ask Slashdot: How Long Do We Give an Online Service To Fix Issues?

ncc189 writes "The Funimation Roku channel has been basically unusable during primetime for about a month now. With very little feedback from the company and no improvements to the service at all, I canceled my account. My question to Slashdot users is: how long do you give a service to fix issues before you cancel the service, and how much leeway do you give the service's representatives in communicating issue with us? It seems to me that a few days is more than enough in the internet age; 3+ weeks is beyond reason. How long do you think is fair for services like this?"

17 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. That depends by ajyasgar · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is the "online service" Oracle?

    1. Re:That depends by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Is the "online service" Oracle?

      No. It's just a collection of badly translated and hacked up anime that makes the fans cry everytime the logo "Funimation" splashes across the screen. There's websites dedicated to warning fans of what their next production will be, so they can snap up the fansubs before they vanish from the ethers.

      Hearing Funimation is picking up your favorite anime is to an anime geek hearing that JJ Abrams is going to direct the next Star Wars. It's a KHAAAAAAAAAN! moment. Oh, and apologies to Star Trek fans... he got to you too. :(

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  2. Depends by Osgeld · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I pay for it, they better be telling me something reasonably accurate

    If I dont, then they dont owe me squat and it will be back when its back

    1. Re:Depends by sandytaru · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty much this. I'll give something a few weeks or even a few months if it was a free service and the only monetary contribution I made toward it was turning off AdBlock. But it it's something I paid for, even a token amount like $5 a month, it better damn well be fixed in a few days. If it's not fixed by the time the next billing cycle rolls around, it's definitely cancellation time. I'll find a free version, or a better service that gives me value for my money.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    2. Re:Depends by dakohli · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If I pay for it, they better be telling me something reasonably accurate

      There should be clauses in your SLA defining what they have to tell you and when, as well as financial penalties for failing to deliver uptime and/or information. If you don't have an SLA then what are you doing paying for it?

      It is called "Customer Service". I don't really care if there is an SLA, if the service isn't good, I will contact them, and if I'm satisfied I will continue, if not I will cancel

      Case in point is Sirius Satellite Radio. last year just before I paid for the next year they dropped a station that happened to be what I mostly listened to. When I called them up, they offered a reduced rate. This year when it was time to renew, I called them up and they again offered me a discounted rate. I'm still with them because I am paying what I consider is fair for the service. If they do not offer me a discount next year I will drop it. How long you will wait, or accept unacceptable service is up to the individual. I know some that will cancel at the drop of a hat. I tend to be a little more patient, but once I cancel, I don't bother going back, ever

      If more people voted with their feet, these companies might get the message.

  3. it took me 3 years to get earthlink to fix my dsl by josepha48 · · Score: 3, Informative

    yes 3 years before they sent an AT&T person to my house to look at the wires. He then fixed it in minutes. It now works fine. Yes I still have DSL only because my Comcast cable TV goes out monthly. At least if I loose cable I can still watch netflix, hulu and online stuff.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!

  4. You give it as much time as it's worth to you by eksith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I assure you there are folks who would give any service of their choosing as much time as they like if they think it's worth while to wait. Can be three weeks like for you or it can be maybe a few months even. Loyalty is a personal thing, but companies that do poorly with service tend not to have many clients/customers unless they offer something unique and/or interesting. And loyalty is very fickle.

    --
    If computers were people, I'd be a misanthrope.
  5. Re:What exactly is this channel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Want Anime? Go check out crunchyroll.

  6. I would want some kind of compensation to stay by cgimusic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If it goes beyond 5 days I would expect a reduced bill for the time the service was unusable that month. If I didn't get one I would definitely cancel.

  7. A number of factors by sjames · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My willingness to give them a chance would depend on a number of things:

    1. Am I getting credited for the outage time?
    2. Did they offer it or did I have to ask/demand it
    3. Are they willing to talk about what's gone wrong and how long they think it will take to fix?
    4. How have they treated me in the past.
  8. Re:It seems to me that a few days is more than eno by pla · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ISTM that you're an unreasonable little snot, since the speed of the resolution of the problem is completely dependent upon the cause of the problem. What is reasonable, though, is timely customer feedback.

    Sorry, but 100% wrong. Yeah, timely feedback (including the magic phrase "prorated refund for downtime") will buy you a few days (at most). But if I actually pay for your service, I don't give two shits if your only datacenter just got hit by a Tsunami - Get your service back up now, or by next week your competition will provide it for me.

  9. OH! This Isn't About Bank of America by reallocate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    At first glance, I thought this was about Bank of America's day-long outage yesterday. On the first of the month, phone, ATM and online access was gone until late in the evening Eastern time.

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    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  10. Re:It seems to me that a few days is more than eno by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Empathy has nothing at all to do with it. I can feel bad for a destroyed data center owner but that feeling does not negate the reason and purpose for using them in the first place. the bottom line is that there is no reason to have an ISP that doesn't allow you to get online, there is no reason to keep buying bus tokens when you do not ride the bus, and there is no reason to continue paying for an online service when they cannot deliver whatever it is that you needed in the first place. In most cases, if the service or whatever was needed, it will likely need to be usable therefore replicated when the service isn't provided. Being sad or feeling sorry for the service doesn't change that.

  11. Things have been quirky for more than a month by Kagato · · Score: 4, Informative

    Funimation has had ongoing problems with their website for over a year. They continually have problems with site performance, video player performance and have pretty routine crashes. They have been calling their website Beta since 2011.

  12. Re:It seems to me that a few days is more than eno by pla · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is plus 5 Insightful? More like plus 5 Sad. Or are most people here Americans with scientifically proven zero empathy.

    "Empathy" means the ability to understand and share the feelings of a fellow human. Mitt's assertions to the contrary aside, "businesses are [not] people too". So empathy has nothing to do with it.

    A business exists solely for the exchange of goods and/or services for money (or other goods and/or services). If a business can't provide me with the goods and/or services I want, they have no reason to continue to exist for all it matters to me. I would only even give them that few days I mentioned to restore service, as a matter of convenience to me - If I could realistically switch ISPs, for example, 15 seconds after discovering my internet had gone down again, Verizon could kiss my hairy white ass goodbye.

    Now if you want to talk about loyalty - I have loyalty to my friends. I have loyalty to my family. I have loyalty to people that have given me a reason to care about them. The company that, despite my opting out of everything possible on their privacy policy still has their "partners" send me life insurance offers once a month? Yeah, not so much loyalty there - More like "simmering resentment" that such complete bastards manage to have the best game in town.

  13. Re:SiriusXM by caballew · · Score: 5, Informative

    Case in point is Sirius Satellite Radio. last year just before I paid for the next year they dropped a station that happened to be what I mostly listened to. When I called them up, they offered a reduced rate. This year when it was time to renew, I called them up and they again offered me a discounted rate. I'm still with them because I am paying what I consider is fair for the service. If they do not offer me a discount next year I will drop it.

    I found that if you disable auto-renew, then when it's renewal time they don't cut you off for a few weeks while they try desperately to contact you. After a week or so, finally answer the phone and tell them their service is too expensive. Every year, they "check" with a retention supervisor and then offer me a reduced rate of ~$6/mo if I prepay for a year. That's less than 1/2 of their regular rate.

  14. Re:it took me 3 years to get earthlink to fix my d by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I lived with broken DSL for 3 months before I sent a letter to the FCC complaining. I copied the line owner and the service provider, and the problem was fixed within 48 hours of me sending the letter, probably before the FCC even received my complaint. And yes, the FCC did follow up on my complaint.