A new reason to hate Microsoft...
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
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Some advantages to credit cards (visa/mastercard) in the US (US law/regulation) versus debits. Card owner can request proof of transaction. If vendor cannot provide proof the card provider (not owner) will revoke the payment. Card owner can dispute payments. Card provider will often side with owner and not vendor. This is because in the US the card provider for the consumer is not allowed to allow be an agent for the business/vendor. Card owners are only libel for $50 total if their card is stolen. Most card providers will not even use that limit (so zero libel.) This last one can be especially relevant compared to debit if there is a large transaction. The above does not apply to Amex. Some of the above impacts vendors in such a way to protect consumers. For example a vendor provider can require the Vendor to keep a certain amount of money in the vendor credit account to handle refund requests. And example of the impact that can have can be seen with the Frontier Airline bankruptcy some years ago. Also vendor providers will shut down a seller if the sell 'too much' to quickly. Since the card providers consider that a likely indication of fraud.
Libel means slandering someone. Liable means to be responsible for something.
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Assuming this is a credit card, look for a card provider that supports virtual account numbers. My CCs tend to have high limits (I keep paying them off, the CC companies raise my limit - weird). Anyway, the virtual account protects the primary #, and you can set your own expiration date, max amount charged, etc. The best part is that you can simply delete them - poof. Everything else continues to work (unlike when you have to close an account due to fraud). I don't tolerate this sort of nonsense any longer from companies like Microsoft. I actually did this to one place that was told to cancel my account, refused to do so... contested all the charges and deleted the virtual number. Got a call from them the next day - they wanted my new CC #. The call was a short one. Oh, and the CC provider, as mentioned, is much more rigorous than a typical bank.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
I love it when the consumer wins. :thumbsup:
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
Surely Microsoft is doing nine out of ten things (or even 95 percent) correctly and perfectly, especially under Nadella. Otherwise they would not have grown such big in the last ten years since he took over.
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Come, come now! I'm pretty sure what you describe is fraudulent behaviour and, if Microsoft would engage in something like that, they would get their behinds sued instantly. I didn't try it with Microsoft (I'm quite happy with my Office 365 subscription), but with other subscriptions I've been able to cancel the renewal and the subscription stayed active until the end of term ('cause I paid for it). After that you can delete the account completely, credit card and all.
Mircea
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I have to say, I thank them for Visual Studio - far and away the best IDE I've ever used.
In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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In Norway, Visa is a debit card, not a credit card. It might be different in other countries. There are lots of plastic cards used for payments that are not credit cards. A number of chain stores have their own systems, with user accounts where you can make deposits as pre-payment. Paying with the card usually give you an extra discount. Other systems that do not use a standard size plastic card, but e.g. a chip fastened to the windshield of your car, for toll roads, give you a discount if you prepay a certain amount. Presenting the chip is technically very similar to presenting a debit card, although the appearance is somewhat different.
Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.
Here in the UK at least, Visa is both a credit card (e.g. Barclaycard) and a Debit card (e.g. my Visa Debit operated by my own bank, which isn't Barclay's). Similarly, there are a number of card operators who work under the Mastercard flag. I guess it's similar elsewhere?
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Assuming this is a credit card, look for a card provider that supports virtual account numbers. My CCs tend to have high limits (I keep paying them off, the CC companies raise my limit - weird). Anyway, the virtual account protects the primary #, and you can set your own expiration date, max amount charged, etc. The best part is that you can simply delete them - poof. Everything else continues to work (unlike when you have to close an account due to fraud). I don't tolerate this sort of nonsense any longer from companies like Microsoft. I actually did this to one place that was told to cancel my account, refused to do so... contested all the charges and deleted the virtual number. Got a call from them the next day - they wanted my new CC #. The call was a short one. Oh, and the CC provider, as mentioned, is much more rigorous than a typical bank.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
Sounds interesting - haven't heard of virtual accounts. Is it a specifically U.S.A. thing, or elsewhere?
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A Mandalorian quote?
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
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Assuming this is a credit card, look for a card provider that supports virtual account numbers. My CCs tend to have high limits (I keep paying them off, the CC companies raise my limit - weird). Anyway, the virtual account protects the primary #, and you can set your own expiration date, max amount charged, etc. The best part is that you can simply delete them - poof. Everything else continues to work (unlike when you have to close an account due to fraud). I don't tolerate this sort of nonsense any longer from companies like Microsoft. I actually did this to one place that was told to cancel my account, refused to do so... contested all the charges and deleted the virtual number. Got a call from them the next day - they wanted my new CC #. The call was a short one. Oh, and the CC provider, as mentioned, is much more rigorous than a typical bank.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
I've never heard of a virtual account number. Can you suggest a card issuer that offers that service?
Will Rogers never met me.
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Sander Rossel wrote:
Very few people in the Netherlands have a credit card.
Really ? (genuinely curious). No Visa ? no Mastercard ?
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
I haven' had a credit card in 10 years. I paid my Visa off and cut it up. If I can't pay cash, I don't buy. No subscriptions either. CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr.PhD P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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Come, come now! I'm pretty sure what you describe is fraudulent behaviour and, if Microsoft would engage in something like that, they would get their behinds sued instantly. I didn't try it with Microsoft (I'm quite happy with my Office 365 subscription), but with other subscriptions I've been able to cancel the renewal and the subscription stayed active until the end of term ('cause I paid for it). After that you can delete the account completely, credit card and all.
Mircea
Mircea Neacsu wrote:
I'm pretty sure what you describe is fraudulent behaviour
I doubt it. Unless they specifically document it otherwise they can probably do anything they want along those lines. At least in the US. Now if they do something extreme like charge people $100 to cancel a $10 subscription then they are likely going to end up facing some sort of lawsuit. But it might take years for that to get going. If I remember correctly companies have been getting sued for decades now just because they make it very difficult to cancel their subscriptions (I think that happened to AOL.) Yet it still happens.
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg
In the US, I will use a credit card to but a gift credit card. You pick the “ gift size “ like $100. You pay an 8% overhead, but when the gift account is drained, you know they will shut you down. I consider it an 8% security fee to protect my primary cards if I am dealing with a sketchy site. Guarantees the topside exposure. You can do this where I live but you cannot buy a lottery ticket with a credit card! ponder that for a while My conclusion: to prevent “buy every combo”, and then multiple winners split the pot?
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Credit cards tend to be better for online payments than debit cards. If you ever need to query a transaction, the company will be much more proactive at clawing the money back, since technically it's still their money. Whereas with a debit card, it's your money, so the bank typically won't lift a finger to help you. :)
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer
Undoubtedly, but it still sucks if your country (and I guess the whole of Europe) hardly uses credit cards. It's simply a hassle to get it, just send me an invoice I can pay!
Best, Sander Azure DevOps Succinctly (free eBook) Azure Serverless Succinctly (free eBook) Migrating Apps to the Cloud with Azure arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript
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MS will store payment method one used to pay a subscription. Event the payment is afront... So MS can renew the subscription - one a year for instance... And you cannot remove the payment method because the subscription is active... But the subscription stays active forever because MS can - and will - renew it... I'm so happy that I do not buy a thing from MS...
"If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization." ― Gerald Weinberg