In unrelated news, music piracy is on the rise.
PS. I am sorry that my wording of this rubbed so many people the wrong way. This is a truly a nasty update of terms and agreements, and it’s going to hurt a lot of people financially.
If it’s all fine with you stay in. But if it’s not you have a little over 30 days to get out.
“Selling, losing, trading in your vehicle or not using the Service (or any part thereof) does not cancel your Subscription. You can transfer your Service to another vehicle. If you don’t have another vehicle, you can continue listening through the Streaming Service. No refunds or credits will be given if you don’t have an activated vehicle on your Plan or if you don’t use the Service.”
It’s word for word what they said in the mailing. I already threw it out so believe what you want. I really don’t give a s***.
Since you edited to add a section of the terms:
All that section says is you have to explicitly cancel the service yourself. Selling the vehicle you use the service in and not using it via another vehicle/device doesn’t cancel the service for you.
This is so you can’t sell the vehicle then, 6 months later when you realize you’ve still been paying for a subscription, demand a refund for the service you didn’t/couldn’t use anymore but hadn’t actually cancelled.
There’s nothing nefarious here.
You didn’t even post a source.
Are you getting this from some mail flyer or something?
https://www.siriusxm.com/customer-agreement-mar-15
…so, you can cancel, and you can get a refund…
but no refunds past 30 days into a longer-than-one-month term. pay by the year, cancel 6 months in, you’re out half of what you paid. not even converting the ‘used’ time into a shorter appropriate length term (like a six month plan or 2 quarterly ones…) and refunding some if it…
it’s robbery.
cable companies in the u.s. do the same shit, now. no prorated refunds–even on normal monthly billing.
Honestly I think that’s perfectly fine.
You get ample opportunity to try the service you’ve paid for, usually at a cheaper bulk price vs monthly, and to decide you don’t like it and refund your purchase. Beyond the 30 days is just you changing your mind and going back on a deal you made.
Why should the company have to come up with a refund just because you later decided you didn’t need/want as much as you’d bought?
If it stopped working after the 30 days, sure you should be able to get a refund; but just because you decided you don’t want it anymore? Most retail stores have a 30day refund window… Beyond that is an added courtesy
90 days is pretty standard. But also, retail stores are selling goods. Not wanting to accept goods that have been used for over a month is more reasonable than not wanting to refund a service that’s not going to be utilized.