> By simply watching after the final date they gave us…
Yeah if I stay in my apartment after my lease expires my landlord is gonna charge me rent. Obviously, Netflix shouldn’t have let you in, but…
> I have talked to my father, he did not clicked anything.
I learned long ago not to trust technological recollections coming from my parents.
Ironically, Netflix was actually right about password sharing: someone else with your login credentials can do whatever they want. For all you know your dad is mad that he’s losing Netflix and hit the renew button.
Of course, it would be nice if Netflix would create a family sharing mechanism like Apple and Google have.
If you cancel your lease and then stay in your apartment until the lease expiration date, they aren't going to renew your lease. You paid for the entire month, you're allowed to stay for the entire month.
“After the final date” is a key phrase in the comment I replied to. The word “after” is there.
If you stay a day past your lease your landlord can charge you the next month’s rent.
If you take a wrong turn and accidentally enter a toll highway you’ll get charged a toll, automatically in many places.
If you forget to turn your faucet off you’ll pay for water and sewer usage even if you said you didn’t need the water.
I’m not defending Netflix for willingly making the process this way, but at the same time individuals also have the responsibility to follow some basic instructions and stop using things that they want to cancel.
Do my words have to change for my intentions to change?
If I say “that’s so hot” I can be talking about sexual intercourse or my microwaved hot pocket.
Same words, different intent, different meaning.
Netflix being wrong and the customer being wrong are not mutually exclusive. At some point it has to be acknowledged that adults are responsible for navigating the world and paying attention.
Yeah if I stay in my apartment after my lease expires my landlord is gonna charge me rent. Obviously, Netflix shouldn’t have let you in, but…
> I have talked to my father, he did not clicked anything.
I learned long ago not to trust technological recollections coming from my parents.
Ironically, Netflix was actually right about password sharing: someone else with your login credentials can do whatever they want. For all you know your dad is mad that he’s losing Netflix and hit the renew button.
Of course, it would be nice if Netflix would create a family sharing mechanism like Apple and Google have.