Hello forum members,
I just signed up with your site to ask for some clarification on a certain issue, I hope that's OK.
The Sports Direct company are operating a selling practice on their website, which I am struggling not to refer to as 'a scam'. Basically the MO is this, you choose certain items, add them to your shopping cart, double check that everything looks correct, and then you click Checkout, as we've all done countless times on-line. Usually all we do at this point is pay, not feeling the need to check for shopping cart manipulation.
The difference is, at this point they added a catalogue, with a corresponding £1 charge. You only realise this when they e-mail you order confirmation (which they will not cancel). Having done some research on this, it seems that prior to this catalogue (which they optimistically call a 'magazine') trick, they were doing this with a mug that nobody wanted too. I've tried consumer advice, with no success, and also written to their customer service dept multiple times. Unfortunately, further research on the internet would suggest that their customer service dept does not actually exist...
So, while initially it is a seemingly trivial matter, it looks somewhat darker when you consider how many people are buying from them, and therefore how many £1's they must pocket every day. Also, being an expat Brit, I am looking at spending considerably more than the £1 catalogue cost, to actually telephone their ultra-high-cost phone number. Meaning that in this case, it is only justifiable for me to try and address this using the internet.
So does anybody know if it is legal to add unwanted items to a customers shopping cart on-line, and then to make it close to impossible for them to get a refund?
I just signed up with your site to ask for some clarification on a certain issue, I hope that's OK.
The Sports Direct company are operating a selling practice on their website, which I am struggling not to refer to as 'a scam'. Basically the MO is this, you choose certain items, add them to your shopping cart, double check that everything looks correct, and then you click Checkout, as we've all done countless times on-line. Usually all we do at this point is pay, not feeling the need to check for shopping cart manipulation.
The difference is, at this point they added a catalogue, with a corresponding £1 charge. You only realise this when they e-mail you order confirmation (which they will not cancel). Having done some research on this, it seems that prior to this catalogue (which they optimistically call a 'magazine') trick, they were doing this with a mug that nobody wanted too. I've tried consumer advice, with no success, and also written to their customer service dept multiple times. Unfortunately, further research on the internet would suggest that their customer service dept does not actually exist...
So, while initially it is a seemingly trivial matter, it looks somewhat darker when you consider how many people are buying from them, and therefore how many £1's they must pocket every day. Also, being an expat Brit, I am looking at spending considerably more than the £1 catalogue cost, to actually telephone their ultra-high-cost phone number. Meaning that in this case, it is only justifiable for me to try and address this using the internet.
So does anybody know if it is legal to add unwanted items to a customers shopping cart on-line, and then to make it close to impossible for them to get a refund?
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