Tiara Bergman

Reviews

Review of eventbrite

Don’t waste your money

They don’t check their vendors and support doesn’t exist. Not reliable.

1
Date of experience: Dec 31, 2024

Review of parler

They need to fix the following 1) Don't…

They need to fix the following 1) Don't open home when opening the app, instead open to last viewed parley. If the user wants to go to home, let the user press home. 2) Get rid of that stupid bump effect when scrolling. If they do these two things, it is no different than Twitter or maybe better.

2
Date of experience: Nov 22, 2020

Review of macromedia

adobe pdf editor is shitt

No Body

1
Date of experience: Feb 08, 2025

Review of kickstarter

Kickstarter takes no responsibility for…

Kickstarter takes no responsibility for scams. I complained a year ago directly to Kickstarter about a project that I spent hundreds of dollars on since 2016 that has gone AWOL and never delivered to any of their supporters. Just to make sure you know how useless Kickstarter is, their response to me was: "Thanks for reaching out. I'm sincerely sorry for any frustrations. When a project ends successfully, we collect all funds and disburse them directly to the creator so that they can get started on their creative idea. As such, Kickstarter is not able to facilitate refunds on behalf of a creator. If you'd like to check in with the creator to see if a refund may be possible, you should reach out to them directly. If you haven’t yet messaged the creator through Kickstarter, you can find the steps for how to do so in this help center article. It’s important to keep in mind that if the funds have already gone towards bringing the project to life, a refund may not be possible at this time. Please let us know if you have any other questions."

1
Date of experience: Feb 07, 2024

Review of ESPN

ESPN+ is great for picking up games not…commercial breaks

ESPN+ is great for picking up games not covered by local channels anymore. My only problem with it is when commercials come on, many times we are left sitting with a very bland and generic screen stating 'Commercial Break in Progress' along with a long stretch of silence. It's awkward. It's weird. It's something you wouldn't expect from a great sports channel.....

4
Date of experience: Apr 11, 2023

Review of creativemarket

It was a seamless purchase and easy…

It was a seamless purchase and easy checkout! Love the font!

5
Date of experience: Apr 04, 2025

Review of aaa

Waited all evening and night !!!

One star at best. Friday evening after work. My pickup died with no eletrical power. After the fact, I found out the Alternator went out.I called AAA at 6.00pm. I told the agent where I was and my problem. She said, keep an eye on the app. for updates. So my app shortly said, a tow truck would arrive at 6.36 pm. After waiting a couple hours. I called back in and talked to another agent. This went on till 1.00 am that morning. My app. keep changing time and I keep calling. From 6.36 pm to 9.15pm and so on after every call. Finally after the app said 12.15 am the truck would arrive. I called back in and demanded to know more about the tow truck arrival and company servicing the call. Finally I realized they actually HAD NO ONE ON THE CALL. Everyone was to busy to respond. Because I originally believed what AAA told me and waited till early morning hour before I decided to call a tow truck myself. It was too late or early for depending on how you look at it. I ended up staying all evening and night with my truck. The windows were down and mosquitoes were bad and because of no power I couldn't run my windows up.That evening was a comp disaster and if AAA had been honest with me. I would have made other arrangements.If my three kids weren't on the plan. I'D CANCEL IT THAT FAST !Bottom line, you can't believe a word AAA says. And if you're depending on them. You better call often and stay on them. Oh, after waiting 7 hours before gave up. I had to communicate my feelings towards them.AAA users, GOOD LUCK ! May the gods ever be in your favor !!!

1
Date of experience: Aug 22, 2024

Review of co

Very bad service in general

Very bad service in general, fake news, comments section is off so probably they thinking is we will stop processing information on our own and just eat what's on the plate. Well, you not gonna stop people using their head and rational thinking by not allowing comments. Let people be. It's a free country!

1
Date of experience: Mar 28, 2022

Review of Spotify

Absolutely appalling

No Body

1
Date of experience: Oct 14, 2022

Review of nerdwallet

👍👍👍👍😁😁😁 great site !

No Body

5
Date of experience: Nov 24, 2024

Review of jotform

Jotform made my job application process…

Jotform made my job application process seamless and stress-free. The customizable forms allowed me to create professional, well-structured applications quickly. With its user-friendly interface and easy submission tracking, I could stay organized and on top of every opportunity. I highly recommend Jotform to anyone applying for jobs

5
Date of experience: Feb 26, 2025

Review of domain

Been using this company for around 20…

Been using this company for around 20 years. Have not had any major issues and the customer service is spot on. Available 24/7 . Highly recommend.

5
Date of experience: Jun 19, 2024

Review of coinbase

They removed send feature to so called…

They removed send feature to so called help me against scammers but all i was trying is send my bitcoin to my own wallet. They did not give me any reason at all and the support kept telling me that it is all ok and normal and i needed to wait for the review. The review came 5 days later telling me that my account was locked out. DO NOT OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH THEM!!!

1
Date of experience: Jun 24, 2025

Review of dictionary

BREAKING THE LAW: I Purchased Ad-Free Version Years Ago—Now They’re Forcing Ads, Locking Accounts

This app is actively committing digital fraud. I paid for the “Remove Ads” upgrade years ago, a permanent one-time purchase—not a subscription, not a trial. Apple’s system shows the transaction plainly in my history. And now, after a recent update, the developers have: • Reinstated ads for users who already paid to remove them • Removed login access, so no one can restore their purchases or access their accounts • Eliminated “restore purchase” options entirely • Made no announcement, no notice, no recourseThis is not an accident. It is calculated, and it is illegal.They are violating: • Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (prohibits unfair or deceptive acts and practices, including post-purchase removal of digital goods) • Apple’s own App Store Review Guidelines, Section 3.1.1 (developers must honor paid content and cannot revoke it) • Standard consumer contract law, which considers the revocation of purchased digital goods a breach of the agreement made at the point of saleThis is a textbook bait-and-switch. A monetization scheme disguised as an update. They took my money, delivered what was promised, then came back years later to wipe it out—silently—and replace it with forced ad revenue.And I’m not alone. Other users are leaving reviews saying they lost access to saved content and favorites because login is completely gone. I’ve seen recent complaints about the website too—features stripped out, no user recourse, no transparency. This isn’t just one bad version. This is a systemic pattern of removing features, locking out users, and burying evidence.But what makes this worse—what makes it pathetic and shameful—is that this isn’t a cheap game or some clickbait app.It’s a dictionary.A tool that’s supposed to stand for clarity, truth, knowledge, and trust.And instead, it’s rewriting the terms after the sale.If even a dictionary decides that words don’t matter, then what’s left?This is unethical. It’s dishonest. It’s manipulative.And it deserves real consequences.I have already reported this app to Apple with full documentation. I am preparing a complaint to the FTC and filing with consumer watchdog platforms for digital fraud and platform violations. If this developer is allowed to continue operating on the App Store after knowingly violating paid agreements, Apple is complicit.If you’re reading this: • Do not download. • Do not pay for anything. • If you’re a past buyer, check your purchase history. • And if you lost features, report it. Loudly.This app should not be allowed to continue operating until every paid user has their content and access restored.No more hiding. No more gaslighting. You sold a product. We paid. Honor it.

1
Date of experience: Jun 10, 2025

Review of crypto

I loved the app until I started…

I loved the app until I started transferring bitcoin. I made a small withdraw to test my wallet and bank connections as my goal was to start trading on a much larger scale. I withdrew $100 of bitcoin, and unbeknownst to me I was charged .005 bitcoin for the transaction fee. That is $50 to withdraw $100. I contacted customer support and got the runaround and told it was my fault. I asked to speak to a supervisor and was refused theee times. Then was told it would be escalated internally. I waited and 24 hours later the support specialist sent me a message meant for another customer, by accident. When I asked about the case he yet again said it was my fault but the fee is the same no matter what size transaction I submit. Like that was a way to solve the problem. And yet again refused to allow me to speak to the supervisor. I told them I would leave the platform and trade on Strike or Kraken, and make sure to leave a bad review for the disrespect and ridiculously large fees. And at that point the decide to let me talk to a supervisor. What a complete joke! This platform used to be great. But got too big for their own good! Trust me there are other platforms that won’t treat you this way or charge you fees like crypto.

1
Date of experience: Dec 09, 2024

Review of dictionary

BREAKING THE LAW: I Purchased Ad-Free Version Years Ago—Now They’re Forcing Ads, Locking Accounts

This app is actively committing digital fraud. I paid for the “Remove Ads” upgrade years ago, a permanent one-time purchase—not a subscription, not a trial. Apple’s system shows the transaction plainly in my history. And now, after a recent update, the developers have: • Reinstated ads for users who already paid to remove them • Removed login access, so no one can restore their purchases or access their accounts • Eliminated “restore purchase” options entirely • Made no announcement, no notice, no recourseThis is not an accident. It is calculated, and it is illegal.They are violating: • Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (prohibits unfair or deceptive acts and practices, including post-purchase removal of digital goods) • Apple’s own App Store Review Guidelines, Section 3.1.1 (developers must honor paid content and cannot revoke it) • Standard consumer contract law, which considers the revocation of purchased digital goods a breach of the agreement made at the point of saleThis is a textbook bait-and-switch. A monetization scheme disguised as an update. They took my money, delivered what was promised, then came back years later to wipe it out—silently—and replace it with forced ad revenue.And I’m not alone. Other users are leaving reviews saying they lost access to saved content and favorites because login is completely gone. I’ve seen recent complaints about the website too—features stripped out, no user recourse, no transparency. This isn’t just one bad version. This is a systemic pattern of removing features, locking out users, and burying evidence.But what makes this worse—what makes it pathetic and shameful—is that this isn’t a cheap game or some clickbait app.It’s a dictionary.A tool that’s supposed to stand for clarity, truth, knowledge, and trust.And instead, it’s rewriting the terms after the sale.If even a dictionary decides that words don’t matter, then what’s left?This is unethical. It’s dishonest. It’s manipulative.And it deserves real consequences.I have already reported this app to Apple with full documentation. I am preparing a complaint to the FTC and filing with consumer watchdog platforms for digital fraud and platform violations. If this developer is allowed to continue operating on the App Store after knowingly violating paid agreements, Apple is complicit.If you’re reading this: • Do not download. • Do not pay for anything. • If you’re a past buyer, check your purchase history. • And if you lost features, report it. Loudly.This app should not be allowed to continue operating until every paid user has their content and access restored.No more hiding. No more gaslighting. You sold a product. We paid. Honor it.

1
Date of experience: Jun 10, 2025

Review of crypto

I loved the app until I started…

I loved the app until I started transferring bitcoin. I made a small withdraw to test my wallet and bank connections as my goal was to start trading on a much larger scale. I withdrew $100 of bitcoin, and unbeknownst to me I was charged .005 bitcoin for the transaction fee. That is $50 to withdraw $100. I contacted customer support and got the runaround and told it was my fault. I asked to speak to a supervisor and was refused theee times. Then was told it would be escalated internally. I waited and 24 hours later the support specialist sent me a message meant for another customer, by accident. When I asked about the case he yet again said it was my fault but the fee is the same no matter what size transaction I submit. Like that was a way to solve the problem. And yet again refused to allow me to speak to the supervisor. I told them I would leave the platform and trade on Strike or Kraken, and make sure to leave a bad review for the disrespect and ridiculously large fees. And at that point the decide to let me talk to a supervisor. What a complete joke! This platform used to be great. But got too big for their own good! Trust me there are other platforms that won’t treat you this way or charge you fees like crypto.

1
Date of experience: Dec 09, 2024

Review of dictionary

BREAKING THE LAW: I Purchased Ad-Free Version Years Ago—Now They’re Forcing Ads, Locking Accounts

This app is actively committing digital fraud. I paid for the “Remove Ads” upgrade years ago, a permanent one-time purchase—not a subscription, not a trial. Apple’s system shows the transaction plainly in my history. And now, after a recent update, the developers have: • Reinstated ads for users who already paid to remove them • Removed login access, so no one can restore their purchases or access their accounts • Eliminated “restore purchase” options entirely • Made no announcement, no notice, no recourseThis is not an accident. It is calculated, and it is illegal.They are violating: • Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (prohibits unfair or deceptive acts and practices, including post-purchase removal of digital goods) • Apple’s own App Store Review Guidelines, Section 3.1.1 (developers must honor paid content and cannot revoke it) • Standard consumer contract law, which considers the revocation of purchased digital goods a breach of the agreement made at the point of saleThis is a textbook bait-and-switch. A monetization scheme disguised as an update. They took my money, delivered what was promised, then came back years later to wipe it out—silently—and replace it with forced ad revenue.And I’m not alone. Other users are leaving reviews saying they lost access to saved content and favorites because login is completely gone. I’ve seen recent complaints about the website too—features stripped out, no user recourse, no transparency. This isn’t just one bad version. This is a systemic pattern of removing features, locking out users, and burying evidence.But what makes this worse—what makes it pathetic and shameful—is that this isn’t a cheap game or some clickbait app.It’s a dictionary.A tool that’s supposed to stand for clarity, truth, knowledge, and trust.And instead, it’s rewriting the terms after the sale.If even a dictionary decides that words don’t matter, then what’s left?This is unethical. It’s dishonest. It’s manipulative.And it deserves real consequences.I have already reported this app to Apple with full documentation. I am preparing a complaint to the FTC and filing with consumer watchdog platforms for digital fraud and platform violations. If this developer is allowed to continue operating on the App Store after knowingly violating paid agreements, Apple is complicit.If you’re reading this: • Do not download. • Do not pay for anything. • If you’re a past buyer, check your purchase history. • And if you lost features, report it. Loudly.This app should not be allowed to continue operating until every paid user has their content and access restored.No more hiding. No more gaslighting. You sold a product. We paid. Honor it.

1
Date of experience: Jun 10, 2025

Review of crypto

I loved the app until I started…

I loved the app until I started transferring bitcoin. I made a small withdraw to test my wallet and bank connections as my goal was to start trading on a much larger scale. I withdrew $100 of bitcoin, and unbeknownst to me I was charged .005 bitcoin for the transaction fee. That is $50 to withdraw $100. I contacted customer support and got the runaround and told it was my fault. I asked to speak to a supervisor and was refused theee times. Then was told it would be escalated internally. I waited and 24 hours later the support specialist sent me a message meant for another customer, by accident. When I asked about the case he yet again said it was my fault but the fee is the same no matter what size transaction I submit. Like that was a way to solve the problem. And yet again refused to allow me to speak to the supervisor. I told them I would leave the platform and trade on Strike or Kraken, and make sure to leave a bad review for the disrespect and ridiculously large fees. And at that point the decide to let me talk to a supervisor. What a complete joke! This platform used to be great. But got too big for their own good! Trust me there are other platforms that won’t treat you this way or charge you fees like crypto.

1
Date of experience: Dec 09, 2024

Review of dictionary

BREAKING THE LAW: I Purchased Ad-Free Version Years Ago—Now They’re Forcing Ads, Locking Accounts

This app is actively committing digital fraud. I paid for the “Remove Ads” upgrade years ago, a permanent one-time purchase—not a subscription, not a trial. Apple’s system shows the transaction plainly in my history. And now, after a recent update, the developers have: • Reinstated ads for users who already paid to remove them • Removed login access, so no one can restore their purchases or access their accounts • Eliminated “restore purchase” options entirely • Made no announcement, no notice, no recourseThis is not an accident. It is calculated, and it is illegal.They are violating: • Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (prohibits unfair or deceptive acts and practices, including post-purchase removal of digital goods) • Apple’s own App Store Review Guidelines, Section 3.1.1 (developers must honor paid content and cannot revoke it) • Standard consumer contract law, which considers the revocation of purchased digital goods a breach of the agreement made at the point of saleThis is a textbook bait-and-switch. A monetization scheme disguised as an update. They took my money, delivered what was promised, then came back years later to wipe it out—silently—and replace it with forced ad revenue.And I’m not alone. Other users are leaving reviews saying they lost access to saved content and favorites because login is completely gone. I’ve seen recent complaints about the website too—features stripped out, no user recourse, no transparency. This isn’t just one bad version. This is a systemic pattern of removing features, locking out users, and burying evidence.But what makes this worse—what makes it pathetic and shameful—is that this isn’t a cheap game or some clickbait app.It’s a dictionary.A tool that’s supposed to stand for clarity, truth, knowledge, and trust.And instead, it’s rewriting the terms after the sale.If even a dictionary decides that words don’t matter, then what’s left?This is unethical. It’s dishonest. It’s manipulative.And it deserves real consequences.I have already reported this app to Apple with full documentation. I am preparing a complaint to the FTC and filing with consumer watchdog platforms for digital fraud and platform violations. If this developer is allowed to continue operating on the App Store after knowingly violating paid agreements, Apple is complicit.If you’re reading this: • Do not download. • Do not pay for anything. • If you’re a past buyer, check your purchase history. • And if you lost features, report it. Loudly.This app should not be allowed to continue operating until every paid user has their content and access restored.No more hiding. No more gaslighting. You sold a product. We paid. Honor it.

1
Date of experience: Jun 10, 2025