>As long as PlusNet are taking reasonable endeavours to resolve a fault then a customer isn't
entitled to receive anything back.
What period could be considered
reasonable in which the fault should be resolved?
What are considered reasonable endeavours?
Could it be as long as 30 days because the ISP and BT claim to have taken reasonable endeavours to fix the problem and can it be even longer and still be acceptable? How much time is too much before the ISP becomes liable to pay for a faulty or non-existent service? For instance, could an ISP claim after 14 days of no service that the customer wasn't entitled to a refund?
I believe that 2-5 days without service is acceptable, as long as the ISP handles the fault diligently, and doesn't delay it due to poor customer service or a lack of staff, any longer and the SLA issue won't even come into play as the customer would rightly demand and be entitled to a refund IMO.
However, we are discussing an issue which applies across the industry and not just PN (although some ISPs are better than others in that regard). We are also discussing an issue in the wider context because no one in this thread is claiming such a refund and being denied one, therefore I see little point in debating it further for now.
Edited by rsharma (Fri 04-May-07 11:25:30)