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by komocode
1927 days ago
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> The 9to5Mac article says, "if the item is not received, Apple communicates with the customer over email and phone." Yet Dustin reported no phone call from Apple, It's possible Dustin had silence unknown callers turned on. > My understanding is that it's not common practice in the credit card industry for cards to stop working after one late payment. Missing a payment and a failed attempted payment are two separate things that result in different outcomes. Autopay failed which likely set off red flags. > Why did this happen so fast The locked Apple ID and iCloud shutdown only happened on the M1 MacBook he purchased. Which makes sense. If I were to abuse the instant credit system and sold the essentially-stolen M1 MacBook on Ebay, the buyer should be able to know quickly if there were any issues with the device so they can rectify appropriately. |
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"Calls from unknown numbers will be silenced, sent to voicemail, and displayed on the Recents list." So the calls don't just disappear forever, you still see them when you check your phone. You just don't hear a ring. https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT207099
> Missing a payment and a failed attempted payment are two separate things that result in different outcomes. Autopay failed which likely set off red flags.
Why would this set off red flags? A failed autopay actually seems a lot more innocent than flat out not trying to pay at all. Especially if the autopay had been working previously.
> the essentially-stolen M1 MacBook
This description is over the top. The only amount at issue is the trade-in credit.