Crunchyroll

  1. Read the article on account deletion.
  2. Submit a support ticket.
  3. Get response: pLeASE Be awaRE cRuNChyRoll CustoMEr SUPPorT no lONGEr diReCTLY handleS CUstOmEr Data reQUests FoR gDpR, CCPa, aNd lgPd.
  4. Remind yourself that your ticket wasn’t entirely useless. They gave you links to multiple forms to delete your account depending on the jurisdiction.
  5. Navigate to “CCPA Request Form” if you live in California. “All Other Requests” if you live outside of California.
  6. Select the appropriate form based on whether you live in the “European Union and the United Kingdom,” “Brazil,” or “United States, non-California” region. If you live outside of these regions, send an email to the listed email address. I go with the “European Union and the United Kingdom” region.
  7. Indicate that you are a customer.
  8. Specify that you want to make a data erasure request.
  9. Click on “Crunchyroll, Crunchyroll Games” among the options, disregarding the other unrelated services.
  10. Provide your first and last name, email address, and country of residence.
  11. Confirm that you own the email address.
  12. If you receive an email stating they couldn’t find your Crunchyroll Games account, respond that you don’t possess a Crunchyroll Games account.
  13. Sign an account deletion contract with the blood of your newborn.
  14. Support may delete your account, they didn’t delete my account yet.

Piracy

Account? What is account? Can you eat account? Is account an instrument?

  • ThrowawayOnLemmy
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    7 months ago

    Dark patterns are the bane of my existence.

    My job has them for when people try to cancel services and I’ve been fighting like hell to get rid of them. But business is worried if people can cancel super easy, they’ll do it. It’s like they forget we have an actual quality product that people want to have. It ends up looking like an abusive relationship when a customer tries to leave. It takes one click to add service, but it takes a phone call and a transfer and a sales pitch, and then finally a scheduled deactivation at the start of your next bill cycle because God forbid we give you some money back.

    I’m the exact type of customer who avoids businesses that do shit like this. And I’m not alone. If you make it 10 times harder to drop a service than you do to add a service, you should go fuck yourself. Gym memberships, monthly subscriptions, recurring monthly shipments with auto billing. Never sign up to this stuff without knowing what you need to do to deactivate. Or sign up with a preloaded visa gift card and a 10 minute email so you can just shut everything off when you leave and they can keep their bullshit account.

    • @[email protected]
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      267 months ago

      I had a friend that subscribed to a meal plan service but it required a phone call to cancel. Instead, before each shipment, he would search for the company on Google, click the sponsored ad and then proceed to delay shipment from their account page. He did this for years to ensure it cost them money for not offering an easy cancellation path until they eventually did so.

    • @[email protected]
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      147 months ago

      I had to cancel my gym membership because my laziness took over, let’s be honest. I called expecting a huge battle and prepared for a trek. I said “Hi, my name is Bread. I would like to cancel my gym membership.” They said okay and immediately hung up. No new bill the next month.

      A bit rude, but I won’t argue with results. Straight to the point.

    • meseek #2982
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      77 months ago

      The entire “pOePle wIlL CAncEl if itS Ez tho” mentality is the same as “if you don’t keep people in the office at their desk and monitor them, they won’t get work done.”

      All it did was force others to adopt the same practice and now no one can’t get out of anything smoothly. Maybe 1 out of 10 as a delete button. And even then, that’s just account deletion on the front end. Nothing about all the data they have stored.

      flips water bottle

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      “Look, it’s a matter of trust. If your service isn’t trustworthy, keep your customers hostage.”

      Explain it like that, maybe it clicks.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        7 months ago

        Customers obviously don’t understand the value we provide them, so we must force them to continue to use and pay for our services. They get a once in a lifetime opportunity to understand just how valuable our services are. If they still don’t understand, they merely didn’t see the light yet, and must continue to pay and use our services.