When Spotify announced it intended to kill off the Car Thing — its smart music player for your vehicle launched in 2021 — there was a major concern: Could you get a refund on free video chat sexyour unit? After all, if the company is bricking its own product, shouldn't you get money back for a soon-to-be-useless piece of hardware?
Well, in short, yes, you can get a refund, and the company has started that process. The company's FAQ page for the Car Thing's discontinuation notes: "Individuals seeking a refund can contact customer supportwith proof of purchase to discuss their options."
At first, headlines suggested there would be no refunds — a controversial move — but the company has now suggested otherwise. Engadget reported, citing the company, that customers with proof of purchase started handing out refunds at the end of last week. Inverse editor Ray Wong wrote on X that he received a refund in the form of credits applied to his Spotify subscription.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Folks were not happy when Spotify said it would kill off all Car Things on Dec. 9. In fact, Billboard reported some customers banded together for a class-action lawsuit, seemingly in an effort to get refunded. And now, here we are.
So, if you want a refund, you'll have to contact customer supportwith proof of purchase. Something like an emailed invoice or receipt will do. The Car Thing may be dead, but your money isn't gone forever — though you may get it back in the form of a credit.
SEE ALSO: Spotify just made all remaining Car Things unusableTopics Music
Headwinds and Tailwinds: Why We Underestimate the Role of LuckA Guide to “Getting” RumiCome for the Seeds, Stay for the StorytellingHow a Forgotten American Diplomat Resisted the Armenian GenocideRead Harry Mathew’s Comic Masterpiece in Our Digital ArchiveRevisited: Alexander Is Lowered into the SeaThis Might Be the Only Time Marcel Proust Appeared on FilmPortraits and Perennials: Art by Robert KushnerWaclaw Szpakowski Made Labyrinthine Drawings from Single, Continuous Lines“Shut Up in the Dark”: A Letter from Virginia Woolf, InstitutionalizedThe Making of a Comics Biography, Part 3I Found This Wastebasket for YouReporting Undercover on Nationalism in UkraineNow Online: Our Interviews with Ishmael Reed and J. H. PrynneOn Translating Amparo Dávila’s “Moses and Gaspar”“Infinite Mischief”: Elizabeth Bishop’s Rebuke to Robert LowellSay What You Will About Orwell, the Guy Could SmellWaclaw Szpakowski Made Labyrinthine Drawings from Single, Continuous LinesHeadwinds and Tailwinds: Why We Underestimate the Role of LuckHothouse: On Louise Bourgeois’s Holograms at Cheim and Read Redditors threaten Coinbase with violence 'Black Panther' fans are so thirsty for breakout star Winston Duke First look at Lego's new 1,414 Two guys try 'tall man in a trenchcoat trick' to see 'Black Panther' Like Apple's HomePod, Sonos One and Amazon Echo Dot also leave marks These text messages a little girl sent to her grandpa after he passed away are so moving Google tweaks image search in attempt to curb copyright infringement 'System Shock' remake on hiatus Sorry Frank Ocean fans, but his new song is actually an Audrey Hepburn cover We have hundreds of ways to DM, but are we really saying anything? Hubble Space Telescope watches as a storm on Neptune dies Ultrathin display sticks to your skin to show your current vital signs The 2018 Mashable House will warp you into another dimension Intel's graphics driver update makes gaming easier on HP, Asus laptops Russian bots try to control Florida shooting conversation Download this: Photos Companion is Microsoft's answer to AirDrop Nvidia taps AnyVision to create AI Chadwick Boseman's Rolling Stone front cover is sending Twitter into a thirst frenzy Black Panther's Wakanda reveals the limits on the black imagination Lego unveils 'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' sets and we're pretty darn excited
0.9938s , 10493.90625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【free video chat sex】,Miracle Information Network