The Consumer Action Law Centre is a litigation and policy organisation and was formed through the merger of the Consumer Law Centre Victoria and the Consumer Credit Legal Service.
According to Jillian Williams, consumer action solicitor, Consumer Action has received numerous complaints about the selling tactics of A.I.M and other educational software providers.
Consumers complain about hard-sell tactics in their homes and signing parents up for loan contracts of several thousand dollars to pay for their software.
“We alleged that in this particular case, the salesperson came to our client’s (Assam Shihata) home and did not explain to him that he was entering into a loan contract for almost $6000 with Lombard finance to pay for the software,” said Williams.
“Mr Shihata is a disability pensioner with limited English skills and his wife relies on a carer’s pension. We are arguing that the company should have known he would not be able to pay the loan without financial hardship.”
Williams alleges A.I.M breached the law by not providing notice about her client’s cooling-off rights, which apply to sales made at home.
Educational Software company allegedly picks on pensioner
By
Staff Writers
on Jan 5, 2009 3:35PM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Guiding customers on the uneven path to AI adoption
Shared Intelligence is the Real Competitive Edge Partners Enjoy with Crayon
Empowering Sustainability: Schneider Electric's Dedication to Powering Customer Success
New Microsoft CSP rules? Here’s how MSPs can stay ahead with Ingram Micro
How mandatory climate reporting is raising the bar for corporate leadership
Sponsored Whitepapers
Cut through the SASE confusion
Stay protected as cyber threats evolve
Defend Your Network from the Next Generation of AI Threats
The race to AI advantage is on. Don’t let slow consulting projects hold you back.
The changing face of Australian distribution




