Telco to release consumers from contracts after legal breach

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has accepted a court-enforceable undertaking from telecommunications provider BVivid for making telemarketing calls to consumers in areas transitioning to the NBN that BVivid has admitted likely breached the Australian Consumer Law.

BVivid also paid $25,200 in penalties after the ACCC issued it with two infringement notices.

From October 2017 to at least May 2018, BVivid cold-called consumers and told them their internet services would be disconnected or they would lose their telephone number if they did not move to the NBN immediately.

“BVivid’s calls likely misled consumers and gave them a false sense of urgency and need,” ACCC commissioner Sarah Court said.

“Consumers generally have 18 months from when the NBN becomes available in their area to switch before being at risk of disconnection.”

BVivid also admitted that it likely breached the unsolicited consumer agreement protections in the ACL when it supplied services within the 10 business day cooling-off period and failed to give consumers an official form they could use to terminate the contract.

BVivid’s business address, which it was legally required to include in its agreements, was also missing.

“The unsolicited consumer agreement provisions are designed to protect consumers from being pressured by cold-calling telemarketers into signing up to contracts they may not understand,” Ms Court said.

“We are of the view that BVivid did not meet all their obligations to consumers who were subjected to their unsolicited marketing practices.

“Consumers who find themselves signed up to a contract as a result of unsolicited marketing can cancel their contract without penalty within 10 business days of signing without needing to provide a reason,” Ms Court said.

As part of the commitments in the undertaking, BVivid will contact all affected consumers and offer to release them from their contracts without charge and refund any termination fees already paid.

Did you fall victim to BVivid’s cold-calling plans and sign an NBN contract with them? Will you be seeking to terminate your contract?

1 comments

 

 

Good - could have been a lot more IMHO as I got this robo call so many times and reported it to my ISP, Telstra who blocked it - and said would deal - i was already on NBN so didnt get the scare some must have. 

 

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