Seth Mattinen wrote:
Paul M. Moriarty wrote:
Oh, and you might want to read those SLA's you get from AT&T or any other carrier. Typically, all they give you for not meeting the SLA is "credits" and you typically have to ask for them, in writing within 30 days to actually get them.
If I give someone money to do something, and they fail to meet the contracted metrics, what else can they give me except money back?
They can pay a penalty. Simply giving you your money back may not make you whole. Many businesses could make out like a bandit if they don't have to pay a penalty when they don't perform, but just give you your money back. In some lines of business (e.g. residential rental housing) we have laws to protect buyers (renters) that stipulate penalties when sellers (landlords) don't provide the services (livable housing) required by law, in addition to refund of the fee (rent) paid for the services. Giving you your money back when you didn't get the goods isn't really providing an SLA, it's simply not defrauding the customer. jc