On Apr 11, 10:28 pm, "Jason Pawloski" <a679...@webnntp.invalid> wrote:
> Everyone, except complete degenerates like Dutch, recognize that buying a
> camera for one-time use and returning it later is wrong. Beldim even spoke
> up and gave personal insight from his minimum wage overnight job at the
> Best Buy in the middle of the ghetto, something I think we all appreciate
> mostly because he wasn't calling anyone a shithead.
>
> So how about this - you want to check your credit score. Contrary to
> common misconception, you can check your credit *report* for free, but not
> your credit *score.* You sign up for a "10 day free trial" with a company
> for the sole purpose of checking your credit score, knowing full well that
> you will cancel the membership before ever paying anything.
>
> Is this morally wrong? If not, which differing aspect changes the morality
> of the situation?
The video camera example, in my opinion, is clearly immoral because
the transaction was not made in good faith. The return policy is
intended for customers who bought defective merchandise or were
honestly not satisfied with the product. So in my opinion, it is
understood when the video camera is bought, that if the product is not
defective and the customer is satisfied with the product, that the
customer will not return it. These understandings between the buyer
and the seller may not be written in stone, but I think most people
view transactions like the video camera purchase in this way.
The credit report is different for a few reasons. The main reason, in
my opinion, is that the policy is clearly advertised as a free trial
with no obligation, both parties are aware of this, and the seller
understands and even expects that the vast majority of customers will
cancel when the free trial ends.
The second reason, is that the free trial is actually for a product
that the customer is already entitled to (assuming the customer has
not requested a free credit report from the bureaus in the past
year). I've always felt that the free trial is just an attempt by one
of the credit bureaus to offer something 'free' to the customer just
to get the opportunity to be the first bureau to deliver this
information and at the same time establish a relationship with the
customer that may enable them to then sell services the customer may
not have been aware (this may not be a completely accurate view of it,
however). The credit report is in fact 'free', but it is free by law
and not the same way as a 'free trial' for Proactiv is free to the
customer.
Omaha8