Rogers is somehow, impossibly, worse at customer service than Shaw, who were already terrible.

Fuck the government for allowing these mergers and acquisitions to happen. Fuck the previous governments too. (This isn’t a Liberal versus Conservative issue at all – they all allowed this to happen.)

The hoops they force you through to cancel your account should be illegal.

The stores where you sign up for internet in the mall? Nope, sales only. All the local customer service options are gone. They claim I have a secret pin or phrase to access my account (which I never set up with Shaw when I created my account), so I can’t deal with anyone over the phone. I basically cannot cancel my Shaw internet post-acquisition.

Well, one of the guys at the store at least gave me some info on how to ship the modem back. Rogers only allows you to return your modem using Canada Post, and they don’t provide a box – only an account number. So I have to scrounge a box and go to Canada Post with an account number. I’m contemplating shipping my modem back in a refrigerator box out of spite.

I’m thinking of just putting a chargeback on the VISA and forcing them to call me. Well, if it wouldn’t affect my credit. Fuckers.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    112 months ago

    I don’t understand the logic in concluding that eliminating a company will create jobs. Because now you have a ton of redundant roles and so a mass layoff is inevitable.

    Of course I know at the end of the day it’s just marketing to convince the average voter that enforcing the oligopoly is somehow beneficial.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      72 months ago

      Exactly! I remember seeing a video of Jason Kenny throwing out some ridiculous number of jobs it’ll bring to Alberta, when Shaw was already an Alberta based company.

      I’ve come to the conclusion that some inefficiencies are actually good for an economy. With multiple companies each has to have a support department and sales department and installation techs and engineers and… It’s not very efficient in that there’s a lot of redundancy, but it’s better for the economy.