The 300-page iPhone bill to disappear
By Melissa J. Perenson
,
PC World
, 08/23/2007
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A week after the brouhaha of the 300-page iPhone bill and other customer complaints, AT&T Wireless has announced its new plan for handling iPhone billing.
AT&T notified users Wednesday via text message of the change. IPhone users received the following text: "We are simplying
your paper bill, removing itemized detail. To view all detail, go to att.com/mywireless. Still need full paper bill? Call
611."
This change is actually not as dramatic as it might first appear. "What we've had until yesterday was the detailed bill as
the default option," explains AT&T Wireless spokesman Mark Siegel. The detailed bill was the one made infamous for its heft in a YouTube video.
"If you said nothing, you get a detailed bill -- with every phone call you've made, and all of your data activity," he said.
" We've always also had a summary bill as an option; this tells you what you owe this month, and very little else. It has
none of the detail about your calling or your data activity. The third alternative we've always offered is a pure online bill."
With any of those options, you could go online to view your usage details as well.
Changes
Now, AT&T is changing the default billing option for iPhone users. If you're a new customer and want the detailed bill, you
will be charged $1.99 a month per phone line. Likewise, current iPhone customers who make changes to their existing account
after Sept. 28 will be charged $1.99 for the detailed bill.
"We are now offering the summary bill as the default option," Siegel says. "As of Sept. 28, the summary bill will be the default
option for new sign-ups, as well as for current customers who make any changes to their account." Current customers who want
to keep the detailed bill may do so at no charge; they just need to notify AT&T that they want to continue receiving the detailed
bill.
Siegel said the reason for the change is the sheer usage statistics among iPhone users. "A lot of our iPhone customers are
heavy data users. That's no surprise -- you're using the real Internet." Because of this, he adds, "we thought it made a lot
of sense to take action with them right now, to make the summary bill the option for them."
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