- Dec 18, 2015
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My recently purchase LG G4 was diagnosed with a defective charging port at an AT & T device support center. They arranged to ship me a new phone, at which point I would send them my defective device. What arrived was, surprisingly to me, a refurbished G4.
I'm not obsessive about material things and am not fundamentally opposed to having a refurbished device. My problem is in principle: I paid a substantial down payment and am now going to be paying paying however many dollars per month (I financed the phone over 24 nonths) for a used device. This, to me, seems wrong in principle. My phone was very new and became defective through no fault of mine. I think I should have been given an AT & T credit for the amount of my down payment and the choice of any new AT & T phone, and that the remaining monthly payments should have been cancelled. Or, I should have been sent a new phone, to replace my faulty new phone.
Is this the customary system with other cellular providers, when invoking a warrantied phone?
I'm going to write to AT & T customer service but don't expect them to see my point.
I am unfortunately limited in choice of carriers because I need to own a GSM SIM card phone.
Does anyone agree with me in principle?
Can anyone think of any other way that I can get out of my contract with AT & T, which charged me $584.99 for the LG G4?
Posted via the Android Central App
I'm not obsessive about material things and am not fundamentally opposed to having a refurbished device. My problem is in principle: I paid a substantial down payment and am now going to be paying paying however many dollars per month (I financed the phone over 24 nonths) for a used device. This, to me, seems wrong in principle. My phone was very new and became defective through no fault of mine. I think I should have been given an AT & T credit for the amount of my down payment and the choice of any new AT & T phone, and that the remaining monthly payments should have been cancelled. Or, I should have been sent a new phone, to replace my faulty new phone.
Is this the customary system with other cellular providers, when invoking a warrantied phone?
I'm going to write to AT & T customer service but don't expect them to see my point.
I am unfortunately limited in choice of carriers because I need to own a GSM SIM card phone.
Does anyone agree with me in principle?
Can anyone think of any other way that I can get out of my contract with AT & T, which charged me $584.99 for the LG G4?
Posted via the Android Central App