Chatropolis
Crystal River,#2Consumer Comment
Sat, May 16, 2009
Years ago I was involved with a credit card fraud that supposedly delt with an old company of mine. After some quick investigating it was proven that the customer had purchased a computer from Dell and the order taker had used the card to charge every porn site they could until the money ran out. You are in more danger from a waiter than CCbill. People hand their cards out everyday and don't think twice but if something happens it's the Internet company. I have news for you. It's a million times easier and likely that someone else did it.
Anon Ccbill Employee
Tempe,#3UPDATE Employee
Thu, February 26, 2009
Without having your exact subscription information I do not know the specific details of your account. However, based on what you have said it just sounds like a subscription wasn't cancelled. As soon as our cancellation form at our website is told to cancel a subscription, it is cancelled. We always send an email out (automated process) confirming the cancellation status to the email entered at the purchase page at the time of signup. There is a 24/7 support number and email available to deal with a live person to make sure it was cancelled. It was unfortunate you were billed when you thought you had cancelled the subscription. However in the future, please call us and keep the cancel confirmation email on file, so when issues like this arrise, we can help you. A company cannot survive for very long if it does what you have implied we did. CCBill has been around for over a decade.
Common Sense
Phoenix,#4Consumer Comment
Thu, December 04, 2008
Man, I've been using this company for years - enjoying a subscription to http://moneytalk-ondemand.com/ as well as an adult subscription I won't mention. ;) I tried signing up to something over the phone once, and the representative explained that I would have to sign up on the website, which is to say employees aren't authorized to create subscriptions. If someone at the company was signing you up for stuff, that person would be fired, fined, or jailed. Us folks who purchase stuff have to use the website to sign up - which means that your unauthorized charges were created by someone signing up for stuff. If your credit card information got lost or stolen, then close the account and do what you can to protect your identity from thieves. Yelling at business owners who bill for some of my favorite content on the internet seems childish and blame-game-ish.
Bankworker
PITTSBURGH,#5Consumer Comment
Wed, December 03, 2008
CCBill is not a fraudulent company. You would have had to cancel whatever subscription you had with the company they were billing for because if they had a preauthorization, cancelling your card wouldn't prevent future charges. No ripoff here.