Friday 26 July 2013

School Girl Pictures



School Girl Pictures Biography

Source(google.com.pk)

A schoolgirl enjoying a dream holiday ran up a £3,800 bill after uploading pictures of her trip onto Facebook with her mobile phone.

Casey Snook, 14, used the website to post regular updates about her time in New York.

She eagerly told friends about her visits to the Empire State Building, Central Park and Times Square and uploaded a series of pictures with her iPhone.

But she was unaware of the massive bill until her father’s bank account - which funded the phone - suddenly went overdrawn after the holiday.

She said: 'When I heard about it I felt physically sick. Casey was very upset and embarrassed and I was in tears.

'I can’t believe that a company would let a bill which is usually £50 get up to that level. Did they not worry the phone had been stolen?

She was only using it for the normal teenage stuff, updating her friends with what she was up to and this and that.

'It was an experience - we visited the Empire State Building, Central Park, Times Square, Grand Central Station and the Whispering Wall. She was just using Facebook like a normal teenager to tell her friends.'

Casey, of Hengrove, Bristol, jetted off to the Big Apple with her mother on May 27.

Four days into the trip the teenager received a text from Orange warning she had gone over her internet data limit - and her bill had gone from its usual £50 to £320.

The company barred the teen from sending any more text messages or making calls - but did not block her data roaming.

Mrs Snook told Casey to stop using her phone until they returned to the UK in two days time.

But once the family returned home Mrs Snook received a phone call from Casey’s dad Victor, who pays the bill, to say his bank had told him he was overdrawn.
Casey Snook jetted off to the Big Apple in May where she had a great time until she got her phone bill in

Four days into the trip the teenager received a text from Orange warning she had gone over her internet data limit - and her bill had gone from its usual £50 to £320.

The company barred the teen from sending any more text messages or making calls - but did not block her data roaming.

Mrs Snook told Casey to stop using her phone until they returned to the UK in two days time.

But once the family returned home Mrs Snook received a phone call from Casey’s dad Victor, who pays the bill, to say his bank had told him he was overdrawn.
Casey Snook jetted off to the Big Apple in May where she had a great time until she got her phone bill in

range insists it sent a number of warning texts to Casey to say she had exceeded her data usage.

The firm also says it sent a message to Casey asking if she wanted to continue to use data after she had gone over her limit - and she clicked 'yes'.
HOW TO AVOID ROAMING CHARGES

    Contact your network operator before you leave: Often they have cheaper bundles or tariffs available if you know you're going abroad
    Use Wi-Fi wherever possible: This means you won't use any data allowance
    Turn off auto-updating of apps or email retrieval: Again this means you won't use any data allowance
    Consider getting a local SIM card: If your phone is unlocked and they offer a Pay As You Go data rate, this could be cheaper
    Use mobile websites instead of full desktop view: This will save data per page
    Turn off data roaming all together: If you don't want to use the internet when you're away

But her parents are calling for an explanation as to why no further warnings were sent after the text message explaining the bill would be £320.

Mrs Snook said her daughter does not remember this, and believes many people would not understand the implications of continuing to use their phone.

'To be honest, I wouldn’t understand what a data cap was, and I don’t think a lot of teenagers would,' she said.

'This is about the extortion of a 14-year-old, and Orange is completely refusing to budge on the bill.

'The rates that are charged are ridiculous and I just don’t understand why another message wasn’t sent after the one that said the bill had reached £320. Why wasn’t one sent at £500 or £1,000?

'Once they had reached the limit of their data bundle, the customer actively opted out of our roaming data cap so that they could continue to use data, effectively removing the in-built protection from large data roaming bills.'



School Girl Pictures

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