French phone bill waived after 12qn-euro blunder

Authored by bbc.com and submitted by benjaneson

A woman in south-west France, who received a telephone bill of nearly 12 quadrillion euros, has had the real amount she owed waived - after the company admitted its mistake.

Solenne San Jose, from Pessac outside Bordeaux, said she received a huge shock when she opened the bill for 11,721,000,000,000,000 euros (£9.4qn).

This is nearly 6,000 times France's annual economic output.

She had requested her account be closed after losing her job last month.

The former teaching assistant said she "almost had a heart attack. There were so many zeroes I couldn't even work out how much it was".

The phone company, Bouygues Telecom, initially told her there was nothing they could do to amend the computer-generated statement and later offered to set up instalments to pay off the bill.

In the end, the company admitted the bill should have been for 117.21 euros only, and eventually waived it altogether.

It has also apologised for the gaffe, which it says was down to a printing error and a subsequent misunderstanding between the client and staff at their call centre.

jleonardbc on August 13rd, 2020 at 04:51 UTC »

The "payment plan" would require 100,000 euros a month until the Sun dies in about 10 billion years.

EDIT: I got the figure of 10 billion more years till it's totally gone from this article:

The Sun is about 4.6 billion years old - gauged on the age of other objects in the Solar System that formed around the same time. And, based on observations of other stars, astronomers predict it will reach the end of its life in about another 10 billion years.

ColdbeerWarmheart on August 13rd, 2020 at 04:16 UTC »

"Computer sez No."

Radion4k on August 13rd, 2020 at 04:05 UTC »

A local radio station around here has a show where you can send in a copy of a bill and every week they draw one out of the pile at random that they will pay. Putting this bill in the pot would put them in an interesting bind!