In recent times, I usually subscribed to 2 months at a go.



In early November 2016 I still had an active subscription that should take at least, 30 days to expire, But I received a message from GoTV SMS saying that if I paid for one month before the end of November 2017. I would get one more free.



I paid for the subscription on November 11.



My expectation was, if I paid for one month before the end of November, then it would start reading when my existing subscription expired. Then I would get one month free when that subscription expired.



Now, I have realized that by paying on November 11, I automatically forfeited my subscription that was on before I paid on November 11. When the subscription of November 11 expired on December 13, I didn’t get any additional subscription that was promised.



I called your customer support agents, and they answered that that meant I wasn’t eligible for the promo.



If I wasn’t eligible, why did you send me SMS in the first place?



On November 12, I also got SMS that if my subscription stayed active until, I would get another one month free in February. I am tired of these lies?

Why can’t they send SMS only to those who they think are eligible, not everybody at random?

Even a few days ago, I still got an SMS from GoTV, which told me to make sure that my subscription keeps running. It’s nothing but a lie!

They usually promise “subscribe for one month and get one month free.” If you do that, you can’t get any month free.

Their customers support won’t reply your Facebook messages, email messages. Never.

Even if you go to their offices, their staff won’t say a thing. After all, it isn’t their fault.

These people at MultiChoice are “MutilThiefs” When the dollar was more expensive than this, they increased their monthly subscription fee from N1,500 per month to N1,900 per month. When dollar falls to N360, they refuse to reduce their monthly subscription fee.

Black man and black sense. South Africans are mostly black. They’re no saints.

Sometimes, they may have scratch cards and tell you then don’t have it.

It makes me remember Jumia.com.ng scams. They were trumpeting Black Friday 3 weeks before the real Black Friday, and 3 weeks after Black Friday, now close to Christmas, they’re still shouting Black Friday.

Most of the items they claim they sell at a huge discount can even be bought at far lower prices at other stores that don’t give a damn about Black Friday.

Most of these so-called promos are scams.

The best way to deal with them. Ignore all their promos and pay for exactly what you need and see.



Perfect Money/Payeer/Epay/Neteller: www.ituglobalfx.com.ng