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  • Report:  #44365

Complaint Review: Alyon Tech

Alyon Tech ripoff Norcross Georgia


click here for EDitor's comment; Alyon's efforts to resolve complaints and click here to read Alyon's response

  • Reported By:
    Hot Springs Arkansas
  • Submitted:
    Thu, February 06, 2003
  • Updated:
    Mon, May 24, 2004
  • Alyon Tech
    P O Box923299
    Norcross, Georgia
    U.S.A.
  • Phone:
    800-510-5639
  • Category:

I have tried to call this dirtbag company once again and get this problem solved but its just more of the same old bs. I told the guy in customer service that they wont get a penny out of us for something we didnt use, didnt go to, didnt want. I explained to this clod that the phone number on the bill is not our phone number. Its a town 80 miles from here. The name on the bill is that of a man that has been dead for 5 years. I asked how that happened. He couldnt give me a straight answer and got defensive.

I along with anyone else that wants to will be happy to join a class action suit. Im also preparing a bill for my tiime and effort to these scuzballs. Funny but it comes to exactly the same amount as this fake bill i got.....$624.86.

Again , thanks to all for the great info put up. Make sure you go to all the web sites listed and complain loud and long. Let Alyon know we arent going to take this.

David
Hot Springs, Arkansas
U.S.A.

1 Updates & Rebuttals


Robin

Waldron,
Arkansas,
U.S.A.

Norcross, GA: Worlds's Capitol of "Phoney" Bills??!!

#2Consumer Comment

Thu, February 06, 2003

I ran across a report on this site from Karen, also from Hot Springs, AR. Her report concerned a company called TelCollect which seems to engage in the same practices as Alyon. A spinoff? Who knows.



There is some controversy about whether or not one must click an "OK" button to download this dialling software. I also remember an article in PC World (last year or perhaps even earlier) that concerned software being downloaded into a PC just by scrolling over the ad; NOTHING had to be OK'd. I suppose these advertisers/(censored) felt that the simple act of passing your cursor over their material meant that you were interested.



There are so many people out there who seem genuinely puzzled as to how this dialler got installed; that is a possible scenario. Porn sites were the worst at this; they literally "hijacked" your modem dialling instructions. I cannot believe that they were the only industry using this method, so I am certainly not saying that any one of you went to porn sites. You just need to be aware that the technology is out there. I suppose that the only way to be safe from these leeches is to check your default dialling set up is still the same after Web-surfing. If you find that you've been hijacked by a site perhaps we can get this narrowed down and find out what site is doing this! And if one of you does find it, please share with the rest of the ripped-off folks so everyone can know what to avoid!

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