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ISP Information:
A source of concern to many on the Internet is how much personal information on them is available to all who look for it. Wherever you open an account on the Internet and World Wide Web, you are asked for personal information. What happens to this information? Do you have a rignt to privacy? See our article on Privacy: What Can Others Learn About You?. See also, Delphi's Privacy Policy ISP Glossary:
privacy - "Prostate Cancer Man" wrote in messagenews:nowhere-D40F7C.16101303082004@news.isp.giganews.com... In article <10gvt79i2808i9e@corp.supernews.com>, "Hal Hanig" wrote: "Prostate Cancer Man" wrote in message news:nowhere-1A380F.20493602082004@news.isp.giganews.com... In article <10gtvltr3924v33@corp.supernews.com>, "Hal Hanig" wrote: "Scott en Aztlan" wrote in message news:ebmtg0d1pohl3nlf60oscti9u2s8u810qm@4ax.com... On Mon, 02 Aug 2004 18:18:04 GMT, avoidspam@invalid.com wrote:It's also highly discriminatory against people who do not getdelivery of theirmail at their street address and must use P. O. boxes in order togettheirmail.They usually will have a street address, even if they do/can not getmail delivery to it. How does that help them to have their rebate check will end up in the dead letter office? If the check ends up in the dead letter office instead of it being returned to the sender for better address, the check doesn't get cashed. That means that the rebate company retains the money it unsuccessfully tried to send to the applying customer. It's really quite simple....if the check isn't cashed, the money on it isn't spent and stays in their account. Based on your previous post they have tried to send the rebate to the applying customer. Your problem is with the "intermediary post office". And we've had that discussion before. That's right, and I don't have any desire to rehash the Post Office thing again. But the fact remains that the rebater who refuses to mail rebates to customers who only provide PO Box addresses knows that he'll end up keeping the money with the unwitting and probably unintentional connivance of the Post Office Department. IOW, it's an artificial and sleazy way of offering a rebate knowing that, in a certain percentage of the times, you won't have to provide it to apercentage of the applying and unfortunate customers. I can't give any kudos to rebaters who use that artificial rule to limit the amount of rebates they ought to be making. It's use is phony and State Attorneys General ought to be investigating it as a form of theftperpetrated on the purchasing public IMHO. Nice try but that has absolutely nothing to do with the fact that the "post office" is screwing up.The Post Office Department has nothing to do with the company processing rebateapplications refusing to send refund checks to applicants who provide only P. O.Box addresses. Let's leave the P. O. Department out of this dog fight....theyhave no part in it.
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