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Hello, Dummy! Comcast calls its customers more shocking names

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  • Hello, Dummy! Comcast calls its customers more shocking names

    Hello, Dummy! Comcast calls its customers more shocking names
    whore_julia

    By Christopher Elliott | January 30, 2015 | 38 Comments

    Caution: This post contains language that may not be appropriate for a
    family audience.

    The most shocking thing about a revelation that a Comcast employee
    changed a customer's name to "a**hole" was how shocked everyone was.

    Readers reacted with indignation at my report that the company with
    the worst customer service scores in America would have employees who
    hated their customers enough to put it in writing.

    All the while, the cable TV giant has implied this was a single action
    of a disgruntled employee they would soon terminate.

    But that may not be entirely accurate.

    Comcast is no stranger to the insult by invoice. In 2005, it called
    one woman a "b*tch dog" on her bill. And over the last few days, I've
    been contacted by several Comcast customers who claim the same thing
    has happened to them. One customer says a Comcast employee changed his
    name to the phonetic spelling of a profanity that is unprintable in a
    family newspaper. Another says Comcast changed her name to "whore" and
    another says her name became "dummy."

    Comcast says it's investigating these incidents. In a blog post, it
    also promised it would be investing in technology to prevent future
    name-changing incidents. It has already terminated the entire
    subcontracting company responsible for the "a**hole" incident.

    Tom Karinshak, Comcast's senior vice president of customer service,
    told me the company is taking steps to prevent unauthorized name
    changes from taking place in the future.

    "We're retraining our teams on the importance of making name changes
    properly," he said. "We're looking for automated solutions to prevent
    this from happening in the future."

    Comcast says it will follow up with each customer, offer an apology
    and "do whatever it takes to make things right," says Karinshak.

    Until then, let's let the customers decide whether these following
    examples are an anomaly - or a reflection of what some Comcast
    employees really think about their customers. Let me repeat my warning
    about the salty language.

    You're a "whore"

    Julie Swano says her December Comcast bill was addressed to "Whore"
    Julia Swano. She sent it to me.

    "What's most interesting is that Comcast said the `whore' was added on
    Dec. 6," she says. "I have no record of any recent contact with
    Comcast until Dec. 16. So whoever chose to re-name me picked my
    account out of a hat. That says there are probably millions of us out
    there who Comcast employees have renamed. We need to find all of
    them."

    The word "whore" remained on her account until Jan. 6, when she told
    someone in the Comcast billing department about it.

    "What amazed me then was that I had talked with at least 20 people at
    Comcast between Dec. 16 and January 6 who could see that my name was
    `whore' and they did nothing about it."

    Carolina is a "dummy"

    Carolina Heredia also got in touch with me after Comcast changed her
    name to a playground insult.

    "They changed my name to `dummy' in my online account, so that the
    greeting was `Hello, dummy,'" she says. "I had to call several times
    but they said they didn't see it until I went in person to Comcast and
    they removed it."

    Comcast didn't offer her any apologies or explanation for why her name
    would have been changed to "dummy." dummy

    F*ck you, Bez

    Garbis Bezdjian's son, Sako, emailed me on Wednesday to ask for help
    with his father's Comcast bill.

    "After my dad contacted Comcast to remove the TV and phone services -
    they only kept the internet service - the name on their bill
    mysteriously changed to `Fakoe Bez,'" he says. "The bill used to have
    my mother's full name on it, so it really makes no sense why the name
    changed so drastically."

    His mother's name is Maida Bezdjian.

    "I have nothing to do with my parents' bills nor is my name on any of
    their bills," he says. "This is not a mix-up associated with my name."

    bezWhat's happening? Bezdjian believes his family is being punished
    for downgrading its Comcast service.

    "This `Fakoe' name is nowhere near either of their monikers and seems
    to be an insult in the form of the F-word aimed towards my parents,"
    he says.

    I first contacted Comcast yesterday about getting the name
    corrected. As of this afternoon, it still hadn't fixed it.

    What's going on?

    Are these the actions of a single Comcast employee or multiple
    employees with an axe to grind? Have these name changes been happening
    all along without any media attention, with customers quietly
    suffering? It's difficult to say based on just four cases that I know
    of and without a full investigation by Comcast.

    We do know they didn't happen by accident. Todd Loiselle, a former
    subcontractor for Comcast who worked with technical support, describes
    the company's internal systems as tricky to navigate and "just
    hellish."

    "There are no confirmations or prompts asking you if you want to do
    something or not," he says of the systems involving customer
    names. "But it does take some serious navigation to get to the portion
    of the biller, or the software they used to make changes on accounts,
    where you change account names and information. So the rep who changed
    the customer's name to `a**hole' couldn't have done it by accident."

    But one thing is clear: At least one person, and maybe more than one
    person, really doesn't like Comcast's customers.

    Enough to put it in writing. Repeatedly.

    In an odd way, this is a little bit like a whistleblower who leaks
    secret documents proving what everyone suspects - that the government
    is spying on us, that cigarettes are deadly or that a company is
    fixing prices. That person is just verifying what people already
    thought they know.

    Maybe that's what's so shocking.

    Is Comcast doing enough to stop these unauthorized name changes?
    Yes
    No

    http://elliott.org/blog/hello-dummy-comcast-calls-customers-shocking-names/



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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