And why it would have cost me thousands the old way
By AlexH llmresearch.net
Not when the other side has a full legal team, multilingual support agents, European consumer law expertise, and a business model that depends on you staying locked in.
This is the story of how I found myself in a cross-border contractual dispute with a large European technology company, facing a demand to pay for eight months of a service I no longer needed and how AI, specifically Claude, helped me win. Completely. Full termination. Full refund. No lawyer fees.
Let me walk you through exactly what happened, what worked, what didn't, and most importantly what I learned about using AI for legal and contractual disputes.
I had subscribed to a server with a commitment plan. The discount was attractive, the decision felt right at the time. Then financial circumstances changed. I requested termination and received what appeared to be an official cancellation confirmation directly from the company.
Then they kept charging me anyway.
When I contacted support, I got the first of many contradictions: one agent said I had a 12-month contract. Another said 36 months. A third gave me a completely different end date. Their own billing system showed all ancillary services terminated IP address, backup, network, service level while simultaneously insisting the main server was active and billable.
Two months passed. Multiple tickets. Escalations to their "Legal team." And every first of the month: another charge on my PayPal.
The total at stake across the remaining commitment period? Roughly €880.
The cost of a specialist cross-border IT and consumer law attorney to handle this? Conservatively, €1,500 to €3,000 and that's before factoring in the complexity of pursuing a French-registered company under EU Directive law from another country.
I chose a third option.
By AlexH llmresearch.net
The Problem Nobody Talks About
You sign up for a service. You read the price. You click next, next, next, and pay. Months later, life changes finances tighten, priorities shift and you try to cancel. Simple, right?Not when the other side has a full legal team, multilingual support agents, European consumer law expertise, and a business model that depends on you staying locked in.
This is the story of how I found myself in a cross-border contractual dispute with a large European technology company, facing a demand to pay for eight months of a service I no longer needed and how AI, specifically Claude, helped me win. Completely. Full termination. Full refund. No lawyer fees.
Let me walk you through exactly what happened, what worked, what didn't, and most importantly what I learned about using AI for legal and contractual disputes.
Locked In, Lights Out
I had subscribed to a server with a commitment plan. The discount was attractive, the decision felt right at the time. Then financial circumstances changed. I requested termination and received what appeared to be an official cancellation confirmation directly from the company.
Then they kept charging me anyway.
When I contacted support, I got the first of many contradictions: one agent said I had a 12-month contract. Another said 36 months. A third gave me a completely different end date. Their own billing system showed all ancillary services terminated IP address, backup, network, service level while simultaneously insisting the main server was active and billable.
Two months passed. Multiple tickets. Escalations to their "Legal team." And every first of the month: another charge on my PayPal.
The total at stake across the remaining commitment period? Roughly €880.
The cost of a specialist cross-border IT and consumer law attorney to handle this? Conservatively, €1,500 to €3,000 and that's before factoring in the complexity of pursuing a French-registered company under EU Directive law from another country.
I chose a third option.