Posted on August 28th, 2009 by Tim Danton
Stop stealing my credit, Skype!
There are some poor, misguided fools out there who still criticise Skype for its call quality. They put their fingers to their lips and wobble them about as they’re talking, feigning the in-and-out nature of early voice over IP calls. Hilarious as such antics always are, it’s far from the truth.
If you make a call using Skype (or any other VoIP service for that matter) you’re far more likely to be impressed with the sound quality. Even using the built-in microphone of an average laptop and a set of crummy headphones, the quality is higher than a landline.
It even supports video under tough conditions. My sister spent two weeks in Kiribati, in a hotel with crumbling walls and one of the flakiest broadband connections known to man, but somehow managed a five-minute video call with my father. And all for free.
I still prefer the convenience of a traditional phone for national calls, but whenever I’m abroad I take with me a travel headset (probably too grandiose a term – really it’s a couple of pieces of wire with an earplug and microphone stuck on the end) and stump up ten euros so I can call landlines.
It’s an excellent system that works out far more cheaply than calling from a mobile or hotel phone: calling a UK or US landline costs 0.20 euros per minute, and even calling mobiles costs just 0.24 euros per minute.
But it comes with one big annoyance: if you don’t use your Skype Credit for six months then you lose it.
“We don’t want you to lose your credit,” Skype’s reminder email says, “so we send reminder emails 30 days, 7 days and 72 hours before your credit expires.” Now call me odd, but if Skype really didn’t want me to lose my credit wouldn’t it just keep it there?
Surely it’s hardly a burden on Skype’s systems to keep that database entry at EUR6.50 (my current balance) rather than zero?
To be fair, at least Skype is now sending reminders. I’ve lost 10 euros in the past due to this same problem, before (to the best of my knowledge) it had any reminders at all. But what about the people who use rarely checked email addresses when signing up for services like Skype? Or who go to Kirabati for a month and don’t take a netbook with them?
Come on Skype, and to all those companies that use a similar “use it or lose it” system. Eventually there will be laws that force you to keep our money in our accounts rather than wiping them clean, so change your ways first. That way I won’t have to perform ridiculous measures to keep my account active.
But if you’ll excuse me, I now have to make a one-second phone call so that my 6.50 euros Skype Credit doesn’t disappear forever.
Tags: skype, skype credit, SkypeIn, voice over ip
Posted in: Software
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11 Responses to “ Stop stealing my credit, Skype! ”
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August 28th, 2009 at 4:37 pm
The worst site for taking your money is 192.com , to see more than the basic you have to buy credits, lots of them there is a minimum charge and if you do not use them they time expire, with no option like skyp to extend by using one.
Gerry
August 28th, 2009 at 8:10 pm
Is it any surprise when its EBay (RipoffBay) that owns it?
August 29th, 2009 at 11:12 am
I wanted to comment but it would be libellous. This practise ought to be illegal. I have uninstalled Skype on all our computers. It never worked when I wanted it to anyway.
August 29th, 2009 at 6:24 pm
yes, skype took my credit before too without warning, the email complaint I sent fell on deaf ears. – nice little earner that.
August 31st, 2009 at 12:20 am
Storm their offices with a gun, and take your money back by force. An eye for an eye, they steal from you you steal from them.
August 31st, 2009 at 11:22 am
Rather odd – when I call using Skypwe (which I really do not like one bit) I get occasionally static hisses for anything up to five seconds on the line.
Frankly, compared to decent VOIP such as sip Skype is horrific.
September 1st, 2009 at 2:35 pm
Last year I became a massive user of Skype, I have a Skype handset for use at home, and I regularly use large amounts of credit.
I have the complete opposite restriction, Skype imposes credit limits on how much it’ll let me spend each month via different payment systems. In August I once again hit this limit – occasionally they’ll increase the limit if I hit it several times, but it can be exceptionally frustrating when the phone suddenly stops working for outgoing calls (and call forwarding!) because Skype deactivated the auto-recharge via credit-card because I spent “too much”. I then need to top up using PayPal (which I dislike intensely due to dodgy business practices) or a bank transfer that is far from immediate.
I’m also very annoyed about Skype being limited to voice calls only when on wifi via my iPhone – my network (in Belgium) gives me a generous data allowance, and I am free to use it as I like – surely it is up to the operators to lock VoIP calls at the network (as T-Mobile does in the UK) rather than have an arbitary restriction imposed on the consumer’s device, I know this is a restriction put in place by Apple, but it’s still bloody annoying.
September 1st, 2009 at 10:50 pm
Seems like a great idea to their bean counters…steal money that’s been lent to them interest free…but to a marketing person it spells doom for the brand,
Just like arrogance of BT as their marketshare bleeds away !
September 3rd, 2009 at 8:12 am
Think yourself lucky; here in France pay-as-you-go mobile top-up credits typically expire in a month if you don’t use them. The market doesn’t know any different, so the operators get away with it…
September 3rd, 2009 at 9:38 pm
It’s not unusual for this to occur with other schemes; it is technically known as Scrip and may not be fair but its just tough s**t
September 27th, 2009 at 7:42 pm
Skype are ripoff merchants – taking credit is theft straight and simple – I will be switching to wave when it comes out & Skype can go and die somewhere – thanks for nothing scumbags