Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Telus Agrees To Give Up To $7.3m In Customer Rebates For Misleading Ads

The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:51 PM
    OTTAWA — Telus (TSX:T) has become the second Canadian telecommunications company to reach an agreement with the Competition Bureau over its participation in misleading premium text message services.
     
    The federal agency said Wednesday that Telus will give rebates of up to $7.34 million to some of its existing and former wireless customers over false or misleading representations in advertisements.
     
    The move comes after the Competition Bureau launched an inquiry in 2012 over certain third-party services that the country's biggest wireless carriers billed its wireless users without their permission.
     
    The advertisements, through banners online or on mobile phones, invited customers to provide their phone number and in exchange they would receive texts containing their horoscopes, trivia questions and new ring tones.
     
    What they really signed up for were subscription texting services that charged a service fee for each message.
     
    Telus acted as a billing agent in the process for Jesta and MMS, which charged fees for a variety of themed texts such as Mind Quiz, Love Crush and Joke a Day.
     
    Under the agreement announced Wednesday, current customers will automatically receive a rebate on their next bill, while eligible former customers will be notified by Telus with details on how to make a claim within 120 days, the bureau said.
     
    Telus customers can receive a $10 credit if they used the Jesta text services from Jan. 1, 2011, to Aug. 15, 2013, and a $5 credit if they signed up for MMS texts between Jan 1, 2011, and Feb. 15, 2013.
     
    A similar agreement was reached with Rogers Communications (TSX:RCI.B) earlier this year, though legal proceedings are still outstanding against Bell and the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association.
     
    Telus has also agreed to donate $250,000 for research on consumer issues.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government It Systems Vulnerable To Threats: Auditor General

    B.C. Government It Systems Vulnerable To Threats: Auditor General
    Carol Bellringer asked 148 government organizations, including ministries, health authorities and colleges, to rate their general computing controls and audited 13 of those self-assessments.

    B.C. Government It Systems Vulnerable To Threats: Auditor General

    Ontario Woman Charged With Tossing Three Kittens From Moving Car

    Ontario Woman Charged With Tossing Three Kittens From Moving Car
    Ontario Provincial Police say the alleged incident took place on Saturday afternoon in Haldimand County.

    Ontario Woman Charged With Tossing Three Kittens From Moving Car

    Meow Mix! Vancouver Cafe Mingles Cats And Customers To Spur Adoption

    Meow Mix! Vancouver Cafe Mingles Cats And Customers To Spur Adoption
    Owner Michelle Furbacher is a former SPCA volunteer who says she based the cafe on similar shops in Europe and the U.S. west coast.

    Meow Mix! Vancouver Cafe Mingles Cats And Customers To Spur Adoption

    Megabus Driver Charged With Careless Driving In Eastern Ontario Highway Crash

    Megabus Driver Charged With Careless Driving In Eastern Ontario Highway Crash
    SOUTH GLENGARRY, Ont. — Police have charged a 64-year-old Megabus driver with careless driving following a summer crash on an Ontario highway that injured more than 20 people.

    Megabus Driver Charged With Careless Driving In Eastern Ontario Highway Crash

    No Room For Donald Trump's Politics In Conservative Party, Rona Ambrose Says

    No Room For Donald Trump's Politics In Conservative Party, Rona Ambrose Says
    Donald Trump may be running to lead America's right-wing political party, but his views aren't welcome by Canada's right-wing party, the interim leader of the Conservatives says.

    No Room For Donald Trump's Politics In Conservative Party, Rona Ambrose Says

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne Makes History By Buying Six-pack Of Beer At Grocery Store

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne Makes History By Buying Six-pack Of Beer At Grocery Store
    TORONTO — Ontario's premier made history Tuesday simply by purchasing a six-pack of beer at a Toronto grocery store, something that hasn't been legal in the province since Prohibition.

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne Makes History By Buying Six-pack Of Beer At Grocery Store