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by aspenmayer
2150 days ago
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I would not have blocked the charges; I would say that the FTC has ruled that items you did not order are yours to keep. As you should never have received the item, it is perhaps negligent in the part of the delivery company not to halt or recall the delivery, but that may not be available on all shipping options, and exercising this option may incur a fee to the shipper. As you were in possession of the device, I think that Google would be within rights to attempt to charge you in this instance, all the same. And yet I also understand your stance. I just don’t understand your justification for keeping the phone. Keeping it, I get that. Who doesn’t want a free phone? I knew someone who had a box show up at their desk at work with a refurb phone inside. It was seemingly new and yet had a SIM card inside. So I showed them how to replace the SIM, and reflashed it. It’s theirs, and the responsible thing to do for any, every phone that’s new to you, is to replace media and/or wipe media, reflash firmwares, and reinstall the OS. Just good data hygiene for the previous owner and for the new one. As a worker bound by HIPAA etc for certain sites and jobs, it’s just a habit, and hopefully soon an automated process, and then a startup maybe? I probably do it 10+ times a day. But I digress. Free phones are real? I’ve seen it. If you get another free phone let me have your old one lol |
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my justification is: a random person cannot mail me crap and expect me to spend free time and effort to mail it back. they're free to pay ups to do that, or get it themselves. at my door. my justification is, entitled people in a high horse can do whatever they want, but they have zero power over me to get me to do something.