Think if anyone has issues, the first course of action should be a formal complaint to BT details the issue and concerns. They then have a right of reply and from that you can decide how you'll act.
I have send my complain direct to CEO, and had reply stating it was being looked at, as talking to the online & phone support got no where, as they did not even know it was closing, in fact online chat told me as I was in contract I would not be affected!
Agreed. The obvious first course of action is a complaint to BT stating that this change is materially significant and asking to be removed from contract obligations. Next step would be a complaint to Ofcom and/or Trading Standards citing the appropriate part of the T&Cs to be “unfair”. Recourse to the legal system would only be necessary if BT levied a charge for contract cessation.
I’m sure BT think they are in the right but guess what - companies, lawyers, and governments have been known to be wrong about these things.
So it’s not breach of contract - you simply want to be allowed to exit your contract without penalty.
I personally think their T’s and C’s are pretty clear and this is all a storm in a tea cup - but if you’re really that annoyed by it then good luck with your complaint. I can’t imagine this service has many users so BT won’t be too worried about a few complaints - to be fair everyone I know uses iCloud, MS365 or Google Cloud these days…
Roger
How much is BT Broadband without Cloud?
Same price.
Thats a pretty decent definition of Free…
Roger
Perhaps you should ask how much is BT Cloud without BT Broadband.
That's a pretty decent definition of not free....
@ianjack wrote:
Perhaps you should ask how much is BT Cloud without BT Broadband.
That's a pretty decent definition of not free....
If you took out BTBroadband and wanted BTCloud you could use it for free. It is not sold as a stand alone product because it was exclusively given for free to BT Broadband customers .
It is now no longer available to new BT Broadband customers and they do not receive any deduction in price.
That is a pretty decent definition of free.
@
"Free" as long as you pay for BT Broadband. That may be your definition of free, but it's not mine.
@ianjack wrote:
@
"Free" as long as you pay for BT Broadband. That may be your definition of free, but it's not mine.
Well I guess we will soon find out when you raise your Claim with the Small Claims Court or Ofcom or whoever else you have mentioned.
You got 200GB with broadband which was increased to 1TB with Halo.
I don't know anything about h***. But the upgrade to 1TB came along with the upgrade from Fibre 1 to Fibre 2. That was the deal, faster speeds and more storage. The increase in upload speed in particular was dramatic so the 1000GB made more sense alongside it.
Whether or not it was "free" in a legal sense, it was clearly included as part of the Halo package
It will cost me to replace it with equivalent backup storage from a cloud supplier.
So BT is making me spend money I didnt expect to when I signed their contract.
Pretty despicable really. At the very least, they could have softened it by saying "we have negotiated special terms for you with xxxxx".
Sadly, I dont think "customer care" comes too high in their priorities here.