I got what looked for all the world like a bill for a National Geographic subscription renewal today.
There's just one problem ... we don't subscribe to National Geographic, and haven't entered a new order recently. Careful examination revealed an explanation buried in the small print that says a renewal or new subscription will automatically be entered upon receipt of payment. Unless I miss my guess, National Geographic is banking on people not looking closely at it, assuming another family member entered the order, and just paying it on the assumption that since it looks legit, it must be legit. Hell, looking legitimate works for identity-stealing phishers, why shouldn't it work for selling subscriptions?
This is a dirty, underhanded trick, and my opinion of National Geographic just went down a big notch.
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You signed up for a one-year term. If you did not explicitly renew it, and notified them as soon as they started trying to bill you for renewal, my understanding of the law is that you are legally entitled to regard any additional copies that you did not order as an unsolicited gift, unless you SPECIFICALLY AGREED that your subscription was to be automatically renewed until cancelled.
no subject
unless you live in my world, where if you ignore dunning letters they give up and leave you alone. (or so the theory goes)
I ignored them much too long and was feeling more sheepish than pissed by the time I got around to realizing they weren't going to go away.