Tag Archives: refund

VIRAL VIDEO! Fans are asking refund of Shah Rukh Khan’s ‘Jawan’ for this bizarre reason; netizens call it ‘the saddest thing on the internet’ – Times of India

  1. VIRAL VIDEO! Fans are asking refund of Shah Rukh Khan’s ‘Jawan’ for this bizarre reason; netizens call it ‘the saddest thing on the internet’ Times of India
  2. Jawan: Shah Rukh Khan’s movie asks the tantalising question, ‘What if Ravish Kumar became a vigilante?’ The Indian Express
  3. WHAT! London cinema hall plays second-half of ‘Jawan’ first, leaves audience disappointed ETimes
  4. Jawan: Will we see Shah Rukh Khan in a political role? Gulf News
  5. ‘Jawan’ Isn’t Just Another Hit for Shah Rukh Khan — It Cements His Larger-Than-Life Legacy IndieWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘The Office’ Star Leslie David Baker to Refund Fan Donations Received for Uncle Stan Spinoff – Hollywood Reporter

  1. ‘The Office’ Star Leslie David Baker to Refund Fan Donations Received for Uncle Stan Spinoff Hollywood Reporter
  2. ‘The Office’ Actor Is Giving Back $110,000 Worth of Fan Donations for Stalled Stanley Spinoff, Says Funds Were Never Used for Personal Matters Yahoo Entertainment
  3. ‘The Office’ Stanley Spinoff Is Stalled as Star Leslie David Baker Gives Back $110000 to Hopeful Fans PEOPLE
  4. The Office’s Leslie David Baker is giving back all the money for his Stanley spinoff show The A.V. Club
  5. ‘The Office’ Star Leslie David Baker, Aka ‘Stanley Hudson’, Abandons Kickstarter Quest For Spin-Off Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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IRS announces California’s ‘Middle Class Tax Refund’ will not be subject to federal taxes – KABC-TV

  1. IRS announces California’s ‘Middle Class Tax Refund’ will not be subject to federal taxes KABC-TV
  2. IRS finally provides late guidance on state stimulus checks Yahoo Finance
  3. IRS announces it won’t tax CA’s ‘Middle Class Tax Refund’ ABC7 News Bay Area
  4. IRS says many state rebates aren’t taxable at the federal level. Some may face filing struggle, tax pros warn CNBC
  5. ‘Unfair to taxpayers’: The IRS leaves millions waiting for answers before they can file — here’s what you need to know before you wade into the ‘mess’ Yahoo Finance
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Etsy refund for $200 plastic cup spirals into angry, viral TikToks – Insider

  1. Etsy refund for $200 plastic cup spirals into angry, viral TikToks Insider
  2. ‘Congratulations, Starbucks, on wasting my time for an entire month’: Customer slams Starbucks for Life, says she won nothing after playing 5 times a day msnNOW
  3. An Etsy customer’s refund request for a broken $200 plastic cup spiraled into a furious exchange that went viral on TikTok Yahoo News
  4. ‘Congratulations, Starbucks, on wasting my time for an entire month’: Customer slams Starbucks for Life, says she won nothing after playing 5 times a day The Daily Dot
  5. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Man Suing Southwest Airlines Says It Didn’t Refund His Canceled Flight

  • A man suing Southwest Airlines says the carrier failed to refund passengers after canceling flights.
  • Eric Capdeville said he and his daughter were only given vouchers to use for future flights.
  • Southwest says it will refund tickets to passengers and “reasonable requests” for reimbursements.

Southwest Airlines is being sued by a passenger who is accusing the carrier of failing to refund customers when it canceled more than 15,000 flights during an operational meltdown in December.

Louisiana resident Eric Capdeville — who filed the class action lawsuit on Friday — said in the filing that he and his daughter were only given credit vouchers when their December 27 journey from New Orleans to Portland was canceled.

The complaint, filed in New Orleans federal court and seen by Insider, said the flight being scrapped also cost Capdeville the price of the accommodation he booked in Portland but never got to use. 

Capdeville is seeking damages for himself and other Southwest customers who had their flights canceled since December 24 but did not receive refunds or any reimbursement for expenses incurred by the cancellations.

Southwest canceled some 15,000 flights in the last week of December during the height of holiday travel, while Winter Storm Elliott lashed North America. Its CEO, Bob Jordan, said the airline faced “impacts beyond the storm.” The airline also attributed the meltdown to issues with its outdated flight scheduling system.

Capdeville’s lawsuit called the debacle an “internally created crisis.” The lawsuit also asserted that Southwest is obligated by its customer service contract to give passengers either a refund or an opportunity to rebook their flight if it is canceled, delayed, or diverted.

This customer service contract doesn’t mention compensating passengers with credit for flight cancellations, the lawsuit added.

Capdeville said he and other passengers affected by Southwest’s cancellations “cannot use their airline tickets through no fault of their own and they are not getting the benefit of their bargain” with the carrier, per the lawsuit.

Southwest said during the wave of cancellations that it is offering a system-wide waiver, allowing customers booked on flights between December 25 and January 2 to rebook the same route with new dates for no extra charge. 

In a statement to The Washington Post, the airline said that it is making “several high priority efforts” in an effort “to do right by our Customers.” 

The carrier also promised customers on December 29 that it will refund their tickets and reimburse them for expenses like hotel rooms and car rentals, warning investors in the company that this expenditure will have an impact on earnings. 

Southwest’s travel disruption FAQ says it will “honor reasonable requests for reimbursement for meals, hotel accommodations, and alternate transportation.”

Representatives for Southwest Airlines and lawyers for Capdeville did not immediately respond to Insider’s requests for comment.

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Inflation relief checks by state live online updates: California, Florida… | Middle-class tax refund, payments…

What are the main causes of inflation in the US?

​​​​​​​Inflation is decreasing, but consumer prices remain almost eight percent higher than they were a year ago. For many families, this news is troubling as the holiday season approaches, and many evaluate their travel and gift-buying plans in the coming weeks.​​​​​​​

The current inflationary crisis is not only being felt in the United States.

Germany has seen prices rise 10.4 percent since October 2021, and consumers in Argentina are trying to keep up with historic inflation that is expected to clock in 73.5 percent higher in January 2023 compared to the same period this year.

Around the world, the supply chain breakdowns caused by the covid-19 pandemic, the energy crisis caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and corporate greed are leading to higher prices across critical markets, including food and shelter.

Read our full coverage for the details and what actions are being taken to reduce inflationary pressure across markets. 

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Crypto.com mistakenly sends woman $7.2 million instead of a $68 refund

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What would you do if you checked your bank account and found millions that shouldn’t be there?

For a woman in Australia — who faced that scenario last year after the cryptocurrency platform Crypto.com mistakenly transferred 10.5 million Australian dollars ($7.2 million) to her bank account — the answer was: Buy a mansion.

Now, a judge in southeastern Australia has ordered the sale of the property — which the woman apparently bought as a gift for her sister who lives overseas — and awarded all proceeds from the sale to the crypto company.

The cautionary tale has attracted international attention, particularly since it emerged that it took seven months for Crypto.com to notice the error.

Katie Gregory, a spokeswoman for Crypto.com, wrote that the company could not comment “as the matter is before the courts.”

A woman checked her spam and found she won $3 million in the lottery — but you should still be wary of scams

Crypto.com is best known outside the cryptocurrency world as the company whose name now adorns the former Staples Center in Los Angeles — and for Super Bowl commercials featuring actor Matt Damon and basketball star LeBron James that frame cryptocurrency investors as pioneers, under the tagline “Fortune favors the brave.”

It laid off 5 percent of its corporate workforce in June amid a widespread downturn in the cryptocurrency market.

Analysis: The celebs have gone crypto

The Supreme Court of Victoria heard that in May 2021, Crypto.com, which operates under a different company name in Australia, mistakenly transferred some $7.2 million to Thevamanogari Manivel instead of the roughly $68 refund she was due. The error occurred when an employee accidentally filled out the payment amount field with an account number, the court said.

“Extraordinarily, the Plaintiffs allegedly did not realise this significant error until some 7 months later, in late December 2021,” during an audit, the court said in its judgment. In February, after looking into what happened, the company sought to place a freeze order on Manivel’s accounts to recoup the full amount, according to background on the case released by the court.

However, Crypto.com submitted evidence showing that Manivel had already transferred most of the money to an account held jointly with another defendant, who may have been in a “romantic relationship” with Manivel, according to evidence heard by the court. Manivel also sent nearly $300,000 to her daughter, and in February, she purchased a property in Craigieburn worth $925,000 for her sister, Thilagavathy Gangadory, who lives in Malaysia.

The four-bedroom, four-bath mansion about 20 miles north of Melbourne sits on more than 5,800 square feet of land and features a private cinema, a gym and two-car parking, according to the Australian website realestate.com.au.

Lawyers for Manivel and Gangadory were not listed on the judgment document.

A Mega Millions host mangled the winning number. Some still got paid.

Crypto.com’s Australian companies have been engaged in litigation against Manivel, Gangadory and six other defendants ever since. In May, Judge James Dudley Elliott issued a default judgment in the case against Gangadory — meaning she did not file a notice of appearance by the deadline set by the court. Elliott thus ruled in favor of the plaintiff, Foris GFS Australia Pty Ltd., which helps operate Crypto.com’s trading platform in Australia.

The company’s lawyers were apparently unable to reach Gangadory, the court said, although she appeared aware that the case was ongoing because her sister’s lawyers said in March that Gangadory was seeking legal advice.

Under the judge’s ruling, published last week, Foris GFS was awarded all proceeds and interest from the sale of the property in Craigieburn. Gangadory was ordered to pay the company’s legal costs related to the case, as well as 10 percent interest, which amounts to nearly $19,000, the court said.

Gangadory can appeal, but she must provide “a good reason for not filing documents, a valid defence to the case, and give reasons why the court should not have made the order” against her, according to the Victoria County court. The next court date is Oct. 7, when the judge will set out the next steps of the case in what is known as a “directions hearing.”



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Kickstarter Game Goes Bust Gambling On Crypto, Won’t Refund

Image: Untamed Isles

In 2021, at the height of the world’s collective blockchain madness, a video game called Untamed Isles—Pokemon, but with crypto stuffmade over $500,000 on Kickstarter. A year later the game is practically dead, and is so broke it can’t even refund its backers.

In a post on the game’s Steam page, the developers have said “we have to pause the development of Untamed Isles and put the project on hold”, which sounds only temporary until you read the rest of what they’ve got to say:

There have been a myriad of factors that have caused the lead-up to this very moment but what this all comes down to is that we are unable to financially keep up with the demands of what we set out to do.

Untamed Isles is a very ambitious title being an open-world monster-catching MMORPG. To work on this project we brought more than 70 staff members on board and we were working relentlessly for more than 2 years to build the game we all were dreaming about. The truth is that the cost of development is high and there were lots of bumps on our way to this moment. Since we started the journey in 2020, the economic landscape has changed dramatically both generally and specifically for cryptocurrency, and we are not confident in the current market. We ran out of financial resources and we can’t carry on the development at this moment.

When they say the “economic landscape has changed dramatically”, they mean “the ass has fallen out of the crypto market, which we gambled your money on”:

We leaned into the crypto market and expanded rapidly off the back of the positive interest. When the crash came, we ended up heavily exposed with too short of a runway. The game remains game-first, crypto-second in design, but crypto funds have become, and remain, essential in getting us to the release. Unlike many of the projects that have foundered in the storm, we actually have a great game design that could stand on its own two feet. But until the crypto situation is resolved – and we’re confident it will be at some stage – then we have to hibernate development on this project.

And that ass has fallen so far out that the devs say in a separate post “Due to our cash reserves being empty, we are not in a position to refund our initial backers. We are truly sorry about this and wish this scenario was different.”

While this could be the part of the story where I say everyone backing this game got excactly what they deserved, the fact is that Untamed Isle’s crypto elements were optional, and it’s clear from backer feedback underneath the “hiatus” announcement on Kickstarter that a lot of people were only interested in the game itself, not its speculative elements:

Image: Untamed Isles

Untamed Isle’s “hiatus” is especially odd given it was only two weeks ago that the team were confirming a launch date of October 6, 2022, and that one of their key promises at the time of the Kickstarter campaign was that “We are fortunate to have funding that allows us to safely deliver the core functionality and gameplay”.

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TurboTax to refund customers $141 million after allegedly steering them away from free services

The settlement, announced Wednesday by New York Attorney General Letitia James, said about 4.4 million customers were “unfairly charged.” Intuit must also suspend its “free, free, free” ad campaign because it falsely lured customers with the promise of free tax preparation services, the statement added.

In a statement, Intuit (INTU) said that it “admitted no wrongdoing” as part of the agreement and it expects “minimal impact to its business” from the changes demanded in the future.
James’ office said its investigation came after a 2019 ProPublica report accused the company of steering eligible clients away from federally supported tax filing products by making them difficult to find in web searches — instead directing them toward the paid version of the company’s filing services. James said the tactic targeted low-income consumers in particular.

Filers who used TurboTax’s Free Edition for tax years 2016 through 2018 will be mailed a check for approximately $30 for each year they were charged when they should have been able to use free services.

“Intuit cheated millions of low-income Americans out of free tax filing services they were entitled to,” James wrote in a press release. “For years, Intuit misled the most vulnerable among us to make a profit. Today, every state in the nation is holding Intuit accountable for scamming millions of taxpayers, and we’re putting millions of dollars back into the pockets of impacted Americans.”

The company responded in its statement that it’s “clear and fair with its customers, including with the nearly 100 million Americans who filed their taxes free of charge with our products over the last 8 years — more than all other tax prep software companies combined.”

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USA finance and payments live updates: student debt cancellation, $2,753 monthly check, tax refund, recession…

Headlines: 1 May, 2022

– Inflationary pressures mean that civilian workers’ average income declined 3.7% in real terms over the year ending March 2022

Wall Street had the worst day in over a year on Friday, with the Dow Jones (2.7%), NASDAQ (4.1%), and S&P 500 (3.6%) all closing the day down

– Amazon stock fell by fourteen percent, representing the worst day for the company in over eight years

President Biden confirms intention to announce decision on student debt cancellationin the coming weeks

Maine begins to send $850 stimulus checks to residents as infant cuts into purchasing power

Some states are offering higher SNAP benefit amounts as food prices increase

– Biden confirms that he will not be pushing for $50,000 of student debt forgiveness

– Where do the experts stand on renting vs buying in this new housing market

Helpful Information & links

– Looking for a status update on your tax refund? Use the IRS’ Wheres My Refund? tool.

Which states have the lowest prices for electricity?

Medicare enrollment:what you need to know

– Chicago provides $150 gas cards: how to apply

Related News

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