The Federal Communications Commission said the Philadelphia company must clearly ask customers before charging them for new services or equipment and make it easier for customers to fight charges they think are wrong.
"It is basic that a cable bill should include charges only for services and equipment ordered by the customer, nothing more and nothing less," said Travis LeBlanc, head of the FCC's Enforcement Bureau.
"We expect all cable and phone companies to take responsibility for the accuracy of their bills and to ensure their customers have authorized any charges." Comcast said today that it's been working to improve customer service it has long had a bad reputation for how it treats subscribers and that the problems uncovered by the FCC stemmed from "isolated errors or customer confusion" rather than Comcast intentionally mischarging its 22 million cable-TV subscribers.
The agency said there were "many" complaints about "hours-long and repeated phone calls" to try to fix the problem and claims of "unhelpful of abusive behavior" from customer-service representatives, like calls getting disconnected.
A Senate investigation this summer had also criticized Comcast and Time Warner Cable, now owned by Charter Communications, for often failing to refund customers who had been mistakenly charged for cable boxes.
The FCC said today that it's largest civil fine for a cable operator, though likely not too great a financial burden for Comcast Corp, which recorded a profit of more than USD 8 billion last year.
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