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Have you checked out yet how to end it online? If not with your Kindle, it may prove easier with a PC or laptop. Is it possible to call customer service? Some type of mechanism for canceling should exist: Given Audible's reliance upon auto-dinging and the prominence of that company, it must exist somewhere or somehow. Naturally, such services' canceling procedures never are prominently displayed on their sites--nor in their promotional materials. Ultimately nonetheless, you'll likely succeed at canceling directly through Audible.
Banking: If worse comes to worse, changing your account number or bank will end all such dingings. Any cleared drafts or online checks likely can't be recovered. Banks often prove quite unhelpful: They prefer not to get involved in ending customer/merchant autopay arrangements. After all, banks obtain more "like-clockwork" merchant fees and perhaps even expensive customer bank fees, otherwise.
Credit Card: If you can't get the charges canceled--dispute them via the card issuer's online or telephone facilities for that. Credit card issuers generally prove more cooperative and helpful. Often, they offer a relatively generous period in which to dispute charges. Payments will end--at least until the dispute is resolved.
It's a hassle: Whatever you do, don't let this continue: I know--"stiffen up" and make canceling Audible an urgent priority. (It's a painful lesson: Try to avoid undesirable future monthly automated "dingings" of the your accounts--as far as that proves desirable and practical. It adds up.)
Consider carefully the possible and future ramifications of giving your account numbers to anyone or any entity. Get a magnifying glass out, if necessary, and read that fine print--or, hit magnification on your device--perhaps that is where both dinging/fee warnings and canceling procedures lodge. (For anything or any entity proving new and unknown to you, find and note relevant reviews and anecdotes online. Ask others about these, if possible, too.)
I noted certain Pimsleur language courses online. The company's first lesson for a language proves gratis or nominally inexpensive--to obtain that, the company requires a valid major card account number though. In the fine print online, I noted that future lessons prove really expensive--customers later on find out about the truly onerous installment payments necessary to pay for each future lesson--naturally those lessons are auto-shipped and accounts are auto-dinged! I'm quite thankful that I noted the fine print--I put my debit card away and quickly exited!
you may need to buy/download them off the internet, programs often want to keep you buying things for long periods of time. if you want to learn another language, i suggest www.livemocha.com it's free to learn another language. You are put in contact with someone who knows the language fluently or has it as their native language.
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