johncons

Stikkord: Klage

  • Jeg sendte enda en e-post til ICO


    Gmail – Update/Fwd: Problems with Virgin Broadband

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Update/Fwd: Problems with Virgin Broadband



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 6:13 PM

    To:
    informationgovernance@ico.org.uk

    Cc:
    l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>, “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>

    Hi,

    while these Albanian mafia-criminals, (or what they are), where out of my flat, a while, I took some photos for my blog.
    And these criminals brought a funny black wire, into my flat.

    Which they just let lay on the floor.
    That’s probably why the third guy showed up.

    The enigneer must have called him, and said I had a bootleg internet-wire.


    When really I’ve had mobile broadband, from EE, the last months.

    (Which I use while sending this e-mail).

    And then they made a funny whole, in the wall, and pretended the funny wire, had been in it.

    This is sickening I think.

    I overheard in 2003, I was followed by the ‘mafian’ in Oslo.

    I’ve written about this thousands of times, on my blog, since 2007.

    The whole World just sit on their bums and looks at this.

    Humanity is a joke, it seems.


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-

    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 4:59 PM
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Problems with Virgin Broadband
    To: informationgovernance@ico.org.uk
    Cc: “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>, l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>

    Hi,

    these mafia-guys, (or what they are), even distroyed my printer, I see now.
    The enigneer pretended to fall out my chair, and the paper-tray, for my printer, was distroyed.

    How can you in the UK have thugs like these everywhere?

    It’s like you don’t have any decent people at all here in the UK.

    You shouldn’t be in the EU then if you are just criminals.


    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 4:46 PM
    Subject: Problems with Virgin Broadband
    To: informationgovernance@ico.org.uk
    Cc: “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>, l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>

    Hi,

    I read about ICO on Ofcom’s website.

    I couldn’t fine e-mail addresses to Ofcom or Virgin, so I write to you.
    I was recomended Virgin, by a fellow study abroad student, at University of Sunderland, in 2004.

    (For mobiles, but anyway).
    I’ve earlier had Nextgentel, (in Norway), and BT, (at an earlier address).
    They drilled a whole in the wall, and just put some paste, (or something in it), and asked me to paint over it.

    Also, they were three people, and BT were only one, (at the place I lived in 2005/06).
    I think this was strange.
    I still use my mobile broadband, because they couldn’t get it to work.

    I said I’d reinstall Windows.
    But that wasn’t enough.

    A few minuttes after the three Virgin-guys left.

    I got a call from Paul, who had told me to call him tomorrow, if the broadband didn’t work.

    (Because I had to say something to get them out of the appartment.
    So I said I’ll reinstall Windows.

    And if the modem still doesn’t work, I’ll call Virgin’.


    Then a third guy; (who got here later, after the other two were finished).

    An older guy named Paul.

    (Who also had a Virgin uniform).

    He wrote his phone-numer down, on a Virgin folder.


    After asking me if I had a pen.
    He then called me, just a few minutes, after they left.
    And said Virgin would be back in my flat, on Wednesday morning.

    To switch some stuff in the white box.

    I asked him if the internet would work in the mean-time.

    He said it would.

    I said that then I don’t any more people here to wake me up.

    Then I don’t want any more Virgin-staff here.
    I think it’s something funny going on.

    I’ve had broadband for years, both in Norway and in the UK, and never have any of the broadband-companies wanted to come back to my flat, to switch some broadband-stuff.

    And without sending a letter.

    This I wanted to complain about.

    Is this to install something that is breaching my data protection, I’m wondering.

    This is harassment, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog


    2 attachments

    wire paint.JPG
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    PIC_7562.JPG
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    PS.

    Her er vedleggene:

    wire paint

    PIC_7562

  • Jeg sendte enda en e-post til ICO


    Gmail – Update/Fwd: Problems with Virgin Broadband

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Update/Fwd: Problems with Virgin Broadband



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 4:59 PM

    To:
    informationgovernance@ico.org.uk

    Cc:
    “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>, l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>

    Hi,

    these mafia-guys, (or what they are), even distroyed my printer, I see now.
    The enigneer pretended to fall out my chair, and the paper-tray, for my printer, was distroyed.

    How can you in the UK have thugs like these everywhere?

    It’s like you don’t have any decent people at all here in the UK.

    You shouldn’t be in the EU then if you are just criminals.


    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 4:46 PM
    Subject: Problems with Virgin Broadband
    To: informationgovernance@ico.org.uk
    Cc: “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>, l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>

    Hi,

    I read about ICO on Ofcom’s website.

    I couldn’t fine e-mail addresses to Ofcom or Virgin, so I write to you.
    I was recomended Virgin, by a fellow study abroad student, at University of Sunderland, in 2004.

    (For mobiles, but anyway).
    I’ve earlier had Nextgentel, (in Norway), and BT, (at an earlier address).
    They drilled a whole in the wall, and just put some paste, (or something in it), and asked me to paint over it.

    Also, they were three people, and BT were only one, (at the place I lived in 2005/06).
    I think this was strange.
    I still use my mobile broadband, because they couldn’t get it to work.

    I said I’d reinstall Windows.
    But that wasn’t enough.

    A few minuttes after the three Virgin-guys left.

    I got a call from Paul, who had told me to call him tomorrow, if the broadband didn’t work.

    (Because I had to say something to get them out of the appartment.
    So I said I’ll reinstall Windows.

    And if the modem still doesn’t work, I’ll call Virgin’.


    Then a third guy; (who got here later, after the other two were finished).

    An older guy named Paul.

    (Who also had a Virgin uniform).

    He wrote his phone-numer down, on a Virgin folder.


    After asking me if I had a pen.
    He then called me, just a few minutes, after they left.
    And said Virgin would be back in my flat, on Wednesday morning.

    To switch some stuff in the white box.

    I asked him if the internet would work in the mean-time.

    He said it would.

    I said that then I don’t any more people here to wake me up.

    Then I don’t want any more Virgin-staff here.
    I think it’s something funny going on.

    I’ve had broadband for years, both in Norway and in the UK, and never have any of the broadband-companies wanted to come back to my flat, to switch some broadband-stuff.

    And without sending a letter.

    This I wanted to complain about.

    Is this to install something that is breaching my data protection, I’m wondering.

    This is harassment, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til ICO


    Gmail – Problems with Virgin Broadband

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Problems with Virgin Broadband



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 4:46 PM

    To:
    informationgovernance@ico.org.uk

    Cc:
    “emb.london” <emb.london@mfa.no>, l.kennedy@easylaw.co.uk, “hv-02.kontakt” <hv-02.kontakt@mil.no>

    Hi,

    I read about ICO on Ofcom’s website.

    I couldn’t fine e-mail addresses to Ofcom or Virgin, so I write to you.
    I was recomended Virgin, by a fellow study abroad student, at University of Sunderland, in 2004.

    (For mobiles, but anyway).
    I’ve earlier had Nextgentel, (in Norway), and BT, (at an earlier address).
    They drilled a whole in the wall, and just put some paste, (or something in it), and asked me to paint over it.

    Also, they were three people, and BT were only one, (at the place I lived in 2005/06).
    I think this was strange.
    I still use my mobile broadband, because they couldn’t get it to work.

    I said I’d reinstall Windows.
    But that wasn’t enough.

    A few minuttes after the three Virgin-guys left.

    I got a call from Paul, who had told me to call him tomorrow, if the broadband didn’t work.

    (Because I had to say something to get them out of the appartment.
    So I said I’ll reinstall Windows.

    And if the modem still doesn’t work, I’ll call Virgin’.


    Then a third guy; (who got here later, after the other two were finished).

    An older guy named Paul.

    (Who also had a Virgin uniform).

    He wrote his phone-numer down, on a Virgin folder.


    After asking me if I had a pen.
    He then called me, just a few minutes, after they left.
    And said Virgin would be back in my flat, on Wednesday morning.

    To switch some stuff in the white box.

    I asked him if the internet would work in the mean-time.

    He said it would.

    I said that then I don’t any more people here to wake me up.

    Then I don’t want any more Virgin-staff here.
    I think it’s something funny going on.

    I’ve had broadband for years, both in Norway and in the UK, and never have any of the broadband-companies wanted to come back to my flat, to switch some broadband-stuff.

    And without sending a letter.

    This I wanted to complain about.

    Is this to install something that is breaching my data protection, I’m wondering.

    This is harassment, I think.


    Erik Ribsskog

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til Sivilombudsmannen


    Gmail – Problemer med NRK/Fwd: Klage på manglende tilbakemelding fra Kringkastingsrådet og NRK

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Problemer med NRK/Fwd: Klage på manglende tilbakemelding fra Kringkastingsrådet og NRK



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Wed, Apr 3, 2013 at 10:45 AM

    To:
    Postmottak Sivilombudsmannen <postmottak@sivilombudsmannen.no>

    Cc:
    Tørhaug Eli Marta <Eli-Marta.Torhaug@kud.dep.no>

    Hei,

    kaller dere NRK en forvaltningsenhet?

    De tuller ihvertfall fælt med meg.


    De har fornærmet meg i et TV-program ved navn Tweet 4 Tweet.
    Og de nekter å motta klage på dette.

    Det samme gjelder Kulturdepartementet.

    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Tørhaug Eli Marta <Eli-Marta.Torhaug@kud.dep.no>

    Date: 2013/4/3
    Subject: Klage på manglende tilbakemelding fra Kringkastingsrådet og NRK
    To: “eribsskog@gmail.com” <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Vedlagt oversendes svar på e-post av 23. februar 2013.

    Med hilsen

    Eli M. Tørhaug

    Førstekonsulent

    Medieavdelingen

    _________________

    Kulturdepartementet

    Postboks 8030

    0030 Oslo

    Telefon:  22248007

    e-post:

    elt@kud.dep.no


    SKMBT_C65213040310090.pdf
    280K

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Tesco


    Gmail – Problems with screaming in your shop/Fwd: New complaint/Fwd: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Problems with screaming in your shop/Fwd: New complaint/Fwd: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 10:18 PM

    To:
    Executive Response <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk>

    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton.

    The receipt says I had paid for the goods, at 21:56.

    Still I was screamed at in the shop.

    One Tesco-guy screamed.


    And a Tesco-woman talked on the calling.

    That the customers had to go out of the shop.

    But I’ve worked with closing shops in Norway for years and never screamed to anyone like that.

    Where are your manners?
    When I walked out of the shop, before closing-time.

    I had to watch my head ‘mate’, a Tesco-guy said.

    What is this ‘mate’, I’m wondering.


    Is it working-class-culture og muslim culture?
    And they close the shop before 10 PM.

    Unlike when I closed the shops in Norway.

    I waited untill the time had passed closing-time.


    And then we didn’t let in any new customers.
    And waited untill the ones in the shop were finished shopping.
    (We might tell them the shop was closed, if the time was passed closing-time).


    Also, today you were again sold out of your own brand cola.

    I’m on a budget and bought the Sunsip one instead.


    This has aspartame in it that causes cancer, it says, some places on the internet.


    Do you want your customers to die of cancer.

    Why don’t you order enough of your own-brand cola?

    It doesn’t seem to be enough shelves, in this shop.

    Also you have three types of baskets, that doesn’t stock.


    Am I living in a thirld world country, I’m wondering.

    I think only countries like Khazakstan, whould have kept the old baskets, when they bought a new type, that didn’t stock with the old.


    And do you wash the old baskets like my old employer in Norway, Rimi, did?

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 10:42 PM
    Subject: New complaint/Fwd: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To:ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton right before closing-time.
    A lose dog ran in my direction, right before I got to the shop.

    A bin had been turn-over by the dog, which ran away it seemed.

    Also, you were sold out of you own-brand cola.
    It said ‘tempoarely out of stock’, or something, on the lable-list.
    How can this be the case with a cola?


    I’ve worked almost a life-time in retail in Norway, and own-brand cola was never sold out, the way I remember it, from Norway.
    It’s just water and sugar mostly.

    How can you be sold out?
    Have you found horse-meat in it?

    Three Tesco-staff were standing in the soda-aile.

    In a group.
    It’s almost like one think something is wrong.

    Also, the check-out staff don’t use dividers in the tills, so they put my stuff with the stuff belonging to the customer before me.
    Why don’t you use dividers in the tills?

    I’ve now also seen that you have two types of baskets, also at the Tesco Superstore in Liverpool One.


    I think this system with to types of baskets of the same size that doesn’t stock, must be like a nightmare, for the staff and the customers.

    Is this to make people use trollies and shop more?
    I instead bought two bottles of Coca Cola for £2.

    Since you had a campaign.

    Have Coca Cola paid you to stop selling your own-brand cola while this campaign is on-going?

    If I’m allowed to ask these questions.


    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 10:38 PM
    Subject: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    today at was at Tesco Walton again.

    I took a photograph of the baskets, so that you can see what I mean.

    You have two types of baskets, which are the same size, but don’t stock well, at the check-out.

    So this makes custommers stressed, (I dear to claim).
    And the cashiers then can ‘screw’ the custommers and give them to little change back, and things like that.

    Since the custommers are stressed.

    Or like happened today, a male cashier in his twenties started to rub or pet my Frijj milkshake, (which I bought as a kind of dessert).

    I think you should train your staff to act conventional, at least at work.


    I was a bit discusted by this rubbing/peting.

    I’ve worked as a cashier at a big hyper-market named OBS Triaden, (Coop), and now that there is no reason to rub or pet goods in a sensual way, for cashiers.

    This was something ‘new age’, I think.

    Please be conventinonal, as some people, (like me), like it better when things are normal.
    That must have been som wicka or something, I suspect.

    And the baskets made me stressed, (since it was an untidy stack that I had to put the basket in), and I therefore became an easy victim for this wicka-guy, or what he was.
    Just to try to help you be more aware of what’s going on in your shops.


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Fri, Aug 24, 2012 at 10:20 PM
    Subject: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi again,

    if you look at the earlier e-mails, your representative writes this:

    > I have also spoken to Colin with regards to the baskets, and while some of
    > the baskets were inherited with the store

    But I was at the shop again today, since Sainsbury’s were sold out.

    And I spotted that you really have two different types of _Tesco_-baskets.

    So why do you write ‘inherited with the store’?


    It’s absolute bullsh*t.
    You just make up the sh*t you write, and don’t really investigate.

    I’m an earlier Rimi, (Ahold), shop-manager, and don’t like being bullsh*ted like this.

    I understand Tesco is a big retailer, but Ahold is also a big retailer.
    I also know a bit about food-shops, and I don’t like being treated like sh*t, like this Tesco custommer-support is doing.

    Shame on you, Tesco!

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 3:51 PM
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi again,

    and I used to have a lot of ‘strange’ shop-manager collegues, when I worked as a shop manager in Norway.

    So I don’t really like to speak with shop managers.

    I think it’s ok to deal with this in writing.


    But I think I have got to say what I wanted now.
    I have some favorite products at Tesco and some at Sainsbury’s.

    So I think I’m going to still shop at both shops.


    But I haven’t found very much to complain about at Sainsbury’s Rice Lane yet.

    So I haven’t sent them any e-mails.

    And I’m not going to send you anymore e-mails eighter.


    As long as there isn’t anything new that happens, in that Tesco-shop, which I think should be complained about.

    Thanks you very much for that you have read my e-mails!
    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 2:06 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    if you don’t value my feed-back I have to agree that theres no point in continuing this.
    There was a second vocher I didn’t get, which your collegue wrote he’d sent to my old adress, around Christmas, last year.


    But I guess it wasn’t sent.
    I don’t think you have addressed it all, you haven’t event mentioned the stained basket, which should be cleaned with high-preassure-cleaner.


    I was at Aldi today, in Liverpool City Center, the baskets were very clean.
    But if you don’t value feedback from experienced shop managers then I guess it’s no point.

    Tesco are the biggest retailer in the UK, and the third biggest world-wide, I read on Wikipedia.

    That you use Sommerfield-baskets and Tesco-baskets that don’t mix, seems strange for the Worlds third biggest retailer, I think.

    It’s like what an independant corner-shop wouldn’t even have done, I think.

    I’m just giving you my sincere feed-back here, but you don’t seem to interested, to be honest.
    I’ve alse seen in the news that Tesco-shares fell over Christmas.

    Maybe you should listen more to your customers, if you want the shares to stop falling.

    But I guess it’s no use trying to speak to deaf ears, like a Norwegian saying says.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 11:32 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:

    Ref 13546692

    Dear Mr Ribsskog,

    Many thanks for your further emails regarding the Tesco County Road Metro store.

    I am sorry you feel Elizabeth has not addressed your issues in full in her email of 20th August. Please be assured, Elizabeth has taken all necessary steps to ensure the points you have raised in your emails have been passed to Colin Richardson, the Manager at the store. If you would like to discuss any of the issues, Colin will be happy to meet with you when you are next in the store.

    On checking your previous correspondence, I can see my colleague Yvonne Edmonds, sent you a £10 Tesco Moneycard to
    Flat 3, 5
    Leather Lane, Liverpool.L2 2AE. This was sent on 12th May 2011.

    As a company committed to delivering the very best in terms
    of customer service it is very disappointing when any of our customers are
    unhappy with us and I do hope you will accept my apologies for any
    inconvenience or upset that these matters may have caused.

    Unfortunately, there is nothing more we can add to what has already been said, and I do not feel that continuing this correspondence will bring any further benefit to either of us. Therefore we will not be entering into any further contact with regards to these issues.

    Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.

    Kind regards,

    Shaun Wheeldon
    Executive Response Team Leader

    Tesco Logo

    ……………… Original Message ………………

    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 20/08/2012

    Subject: Re: Email to Chief Executive’s Office

    Hi,

    I’m not happy with your reply about the bike-boys.

    Because the security-guard didn’t even try to get the bike boys to move,
    even if he was standing just a couple of meters away from the
    enterance-door, which the bike-boys blocked.

    It was like he didn’t care, I think.

    Also, like I wrote in my earlier e-mail I think it’s very unpractical,
    (bordering idiocracy), to have two types of baskets, which don’t mix.

    This is so dum, I think, that I want to escalate this please.

    These baskets doesn’t cost much.

    And you haven’t replied about the dirt and grease in the baskets eighter.

    Rotten fruit etc., have been laying in the baskets, and made a kind of oil,
    that is tacky and sticky at the bottom of many of the baskets.

    This is unhygenic, I think.

    Please escalate to your line-manager.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 4:14 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:

    > **
    > Ref 13546692
    >
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    >
    > Thank you for your email addressed to the Chief Executive’s Office, to
    > which I have been asked to reply.
    > I was very sorry to learn of the problems you encountered when trying to
    > enter the Tesco Metro store in County Road, Liverpool recently. I can
    > appreciate how intimidating this must have been.
    >
    > Unfortunately, our security staff are on duty to protect the staff and
    > stock in the store, and while we do watch the boys when they come in to the
    > car park, it is very hard for the security staff and Managers to move them
    > on. I have spoken to the new store Manager, Colin Richardson and he is
    > aware of the problem. The police are also aware of the youths congregating
    > at the store, and hopefully any disruptions are kept to a minimum.
    >
    > I have also spoken to Colin with regards to the baskets, and while some of
    > the baskets were inherited with the store, they are all in good condition
    > and maintained on a daily basis. Colin has asked me to pass on his
    > apologies for any inconvenience caused with regards to the different size
    > of baskets and he will speak with the Checkout Manager to see that they are
    > regularly tidied up.
    >
    > Unfortunately, there are no plans at present to have the store extended,
    > however I have passed your comments on to the store Director for future
    > reference.
    >
    > Many thanks for bringing these issues to the attention of the Chief
    > Executive’s Office, and allowing us the opportunity to address these with
    > the store.
    >
    > Kind regards,
    >
    > Elizabeth Johnston
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 19/08/2012
    >
    >
    > Subject: Complaint
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve earlier complained about your shops in Liverpool City Centre,
    > Sunderland and Fairfield, and I’ve now moved back to Walton, and the
    > Summerfield-shop has become a Tesco Metro.
    >
    > I don’t really like your custommer-support who doesn’t let me escalate,
    > etc., so I have waited very long, before I’ve sent a complaint, but now I
    > think I have to complain anyway.
    >
    > Today, (18/8), at around 9 PM, I went to Tesco Walton.
    >
    > Five or six boys on bikes obstructed my way, when I went in to the shop.
    >
    > The security-guard just stood there, a few meters away, and he didn’t tell
    > the boys-crowd to make passage for the custommers.
    >
    > So I had to kick some cartoon laying on the ground, to make a noise, to try
    > to make the boys move their bikes.
    >
    > Why does the security-guard get his pay?
    >
    > To just stand there looking at boys-crowds obstructing the custommers, like
    > an idiot?
    >
    > There was even a boy looking at me through the window when I picked up a
    > basket there.
    >
    > Tesco was invaded by bike-boys, and the security-guard just stood there
    > like an idiot, and didn’t try to break up the congestion.
    >
    > Also, this shop has two types of baskets.
    >
    > Half of the baskets are Sommerfield-baskets, and half of them are
    > Tesco-baskets.
    >
    > So there’s always a caos, in the check-out, since these baskets don’t mix.
    >
    > So always untidy basket-piles at the check-out.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Shop Manager, and know these baskets aren’t that
    > expensive.
    >
    > In the chain I worked in, a company came once a year or so, to wash
    > baskets.
    >
    > Something unheard of in Tesco, I think, because some of these baskets are
    > really dirty and greasy etc.
    >
    > Also, the ailes in this Tesco are to long and to narrow.
    >
    > It’s always a congestion everywhere.
    >
    > I wish this shop could have been more like the Sainsbury’s-shop, in Rice
    > Lane.
    >
    > It’s really a much better shop in almost every way.
    >
    > Except for that the prices are a bit lower at Tesco for nudles, etc.
    >
    > Also, no self-service check-outs, in this shop, which other Tesco Metro
    > has.
    >
    > It’s fine with a Tesco Metro, but here you have put a Tesco Metro into an
    > ordinary Sommerfields-shop, I think, and it doesn’t really fit in.
    >
    > So custommers get stressed shopping in this shop, I think.
    >
    > How about making it bigger?
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    > ——————————
    > This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The
    > views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco.
    >
    > Tesco Stores Limited
    > Company Number: 519500
    > Registered in England
    > Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8
    > 9SL
    > VAT Registration Number: GB 220 4302 31
    >

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til Tesco


    Gmail – New complaint/Fwd: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    New complaint/Fwd: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 10:42 PM

    To:
    ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    today I was at Tesco Walton right before closing-time.
    A lose dog ran in my direction, right before I got to the shop.
    A bin had been turn-over by the dog, which ran away it seemed.

    Also, you were sold out of you own-brand cola.
    It said ‘tempoarely out of stock’, or something, on the lable-list.
    How can this be the case with a cola?


    I’ve worked almost a life-time in retail in Norway, and own-brand cola was never sold out, the way I remember it, from Norway.
    It’s just water and sugar mostly.

    How can you be sold out?
    Have you found horse-meat in it?

    Three Tesco-staff were standing in the soda-aile.

    In a group.
    It’s almost like one think something is wrong.

    Also, the check-out staff don’t use dividers in the tills, so they put my stuff with the stuff belonging to the customer before me.
    Why don’t you use dividers in the tills?

    I’ve now also seen that you have two types of baskets, also at the Tesco Superstore in Liverpool One.


    I think this system with to types of baskets of the same size that doesn’t stock, must be like a nightmare, for the staff and the customers.

    Is this to make people use trollies and shop more?
    I instead bought two bottles of Coca Cola for £2.

    Since you had a campaign.

    Have Coca Cola paid you to stop selling your own-brand cola while this campaign is on-going?

    If I’m allowed to ask these questions.


    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 10:38 PM
    Subject: Second update/Fwd: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    today at was at Tesco Walton again.

    I took a photograph of the baskets, so that you can see what I mean.

    You have two types of baskets, which are the same size, but don’t stock well, at the check-out.

    So this makes custommers stressed, (I dear to claim).
    And the cashiers then can ‘screw’ the custommers and give them to little change back, and things like that.

    Since the custommers are stressed.

    Or like happened today, a male cashier in his twenties started to rub or pet my Frijj milkshake, (which I bought as a kind of dessert).

    I think you should train your staff to act conventional, at least at work.


    I was a bit discusted by this rubbing/peting.

    I’ve worked as a cashier at a big hyper-market named OBS Triaden, (Coop), and now that there is no reason to rub or pet goods in a sensual way, for cashiers.

    This was something ‘new age’, I think.

    Please be conventinonal, as some people, (like me), like it better when things are normal.
    That must have been som wicka or something, I suspect.

    And the baskets made me stressed, (since it was an untidy stack that I had to put the basket in), and I therefore became an easy victim for this wicka-guy, or what he was.
    Just to try to help you be more aware of what’s going on in your shops.


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Fri, Aug 24, 2012 at 10:20 PM
    Subject: New update/Fwd: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi again,

    if you look at the earlier e-mails, your representative writes this:

    > I have also spoken to Colin with regards to the baskets, and while some of
    > the baskets were inherited with the store

    But I was at the shop again today, since Sainsbury’s were sold out.

    And I spotted that you really have two different types of _Tesco_-baskets.

    So why do you write ‘inherited with the store’?


    It’s absolute bullsh*t.
    You just make up the sh*t you write, and don’t really investigate.

    I’m an earlier Rimi, (Ahold), shop-manager, and don’t like being bullsh*ted like this.

    I understand Tesco is a big retailer, but Ahold is also a big retailer.
    I also know a bit about food-shops, and I don’t like being treated like sh*t, like this Tesco custommer-support is doing.

    Shame on you, Tesco!

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 3:51 PM
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi again,

    and I used to have a lot of ‘strange’ shop-manager collegues, when I worked as a shop manager in Norway.

    So I don’t really like to speak with shop managers.

    I think it’s ok to deal with this in writing.


    But I think I have got to say what I wanted now.
    I have some favorite products at Tesco and some at Sainsbury’s.

    So I think I’m going to still shop at both shops.


    But I haven’t found very much to complain about at Sainsbury’s Rice Lane yet.

    So I haven’t sent them any e-mails.

    And I’m not going to send you anymore e-mails eighter.


    As long as there isn’t anything new that happens, in that Tesco-shop, which I think should be complained about.

    Thanks you very much for that you have read my e-mails!
    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog
    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 2:06 PM
    Subject: Re: Email to Chief executive’s Office
    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk

    Hi,

    if you don’t value my feed-back I have to agree that theres no point in continuing this.
    There was a second vocher I didn’t get, which your collegue wrote he’d sent to my old adress, around Christmas, last year.


    But I guess it wasn’t sent.
    I don’t think you have addressed it all, you haven’t event mentioned the stained basket, which should be cleaned with high-preassure-cleaner.


    I was at Aldi today, in Liverpool City Center, the baskets were very clean.
    But if you don’t value feedback from experienced shop managers then I guess it’s no point.

    Tesco are the biggest retailer in the UK, and the third biggest world-wide, I read on Wikipedia.

    That you use Sommerfield-baskets and Tesco-baskets that don’t mix, seems strange for the Worlds third biggest retailer, I think.

    It’s like what an independant corner-shop wouldn’t even have done, I think.

    I’m just giving you my sincere feed-back here, but you don’t seem to interested, to be honest.
    I’ve alse seen in the news that Tesco-shares fell over Christmas.

    Maybe you should listen more to your customers, if you want the shares to stop falling.

    But I guess it’s no use trying to speak to deaf ears, like a Norwegian saying says.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 11:32 AM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:

    Ref 13546692

    Dear Mr Ribsskog,

    Many thanks for your further emails regarding the Tesco County Road Metro store.

    I am sorry you feel Elizabeth has not addressed your issues in full in her email of 20th August. Please be assured, Elizabeth has taken all necessary steps to ensure the points you have raised in your emails have been passed to Colin Richardson, the Manager at the store. If you would like to discuss any of the issues, Colin will be happy to meet with you when you are next in the store.

    On checking your previous correspondence, I can see my colleague Yvonne Edmonds, sent you a £10 Tesco Moneycard to
    Flat 3, 5
    Leather Lane, Liverpool.L2 2AE. This was sent on 12th May 2011.

    As a company committed to delivering the very best in terms
    of customer service it is very disappointing when any of our customers are
    unhappy with us and I do hope you will accept my apologies for any
    inconvenience or upset that these matters may have caused.

    Unfortunately, there is nothing more we can add to what has already been said, and I do not feel that continuing this correspondence will bring any further benefit to either of us. Therefore we will not be entering into any further contact with regards to these issues.

    Many thanks once again for contacting the Chief Executive’s Office.

    Kind regards,

    Shaun Wheeldon
    Executive Response Team Leader

    Tesco Logo

    ……………… Original Message ………………

    To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    Received: 20/08/2012

    Subject: Re: Email to Chief Executive’s Office

    Hi,

    I’m not happy with your reply about the bike-boys.

    Because the security-guard didn’t even try to get the bike boys to move,
    even if he was standing just a couple of meters away from the
    enterance-door, which the bike-boys blocked.

    It was like he didn’t care, I think.

    Also, like I wrote in my earlier e-mail I think it’s very unpractical,
    (bordering idiocracy), to have two types of baskets, which don’t mix.

    This is so dum, I think, that I want to escalate this please.

    These baskets doesn’t cost much.

    And you haven’t replied about the dirt and grease in the baskets eighter.

    Rotten fruit etc., have been laying in the baskets, and made a kind of oil,
    that is tacky and sticky at the bottom of many of the baskets.

    This is unhygenic, I think.

    Please escalate to your line-manager.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 4:14 PM, <ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk> wrote:

    > **
    > Ref 13546692
    >
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    >
    > Thank you for your email addressed to the Chief Executive’s Office, to
    > which I have been asked to reply.
    > I was very sorry to learn of the problems you encountered when trying to
    > enter the Tesco Metro store in County Road, Liverpool recently. I can
    > appreciate how intimidating this must have been.
    >
    > Unfortunately, our security staff are on duty to protect the staff and
    > stock in the store, and while we do watch the boys when they come in to the
    > car park, it is very hard for the security staff and Managers to move them
    > on. I have spoken to the new store Manager, Colin Richardson and he is
    > aware of the problem. The police are also aware of the youths congregating
    > at the store, and hopefully any disruptions are kept to a minimum.
    >
    > I have also spoken to Colin with regards to the baskets, and while some of
    > the baskets were inherited with the store, they are all in good condition
    > and maintained on a daily basis. Colin has asked me to pass on his
    > apologies for any inconvenience caused with regards to the different size
    > of baskets and he will speak with the Checkout Manager to see that they are
    > regularly tidied up.
    >
    > Unfortunately, there are no plans at present to have the store extended,
    > however I have passed your comments on to the store Director for future
    > reference.
    >
    > Many thanks for bringing these issues to the attention of the Chief
    > Executive’s Office, and allowing us the opportunity to address these with
    > the store.
    >
    > Kind regards,
    >
    > Elizabeth Johnston
    > Customer Service Executive
    >
    > [image: Tesco Logo]
    >
    > ……………… Original Message ………………
    >
    > To: ceo.customerservice@tesco.co.uk
    > From: eribsskog@gmail.com
    > Received: 19/08/2012
    >
    >
    > Subject: Complaint
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > I’ve earlier complained about your shops in Liverpool City Centre,
    > Sunderland and Fairfield, and I’ve now moved back to Walton, and the
    > Summerfield-shop has become a Tesco Metro.
    >
    > I don’t really like your custommer-support who doesn’t let me escalate,
    > etc., so I have waited very long, before I’ve sent a complaint, but now I
    > think I have to complain anyway.
    >
    > Today, (18/8), at around 9 PM, I went to Tesco Walton.
    >
    > Five or six boys on bikes obstructed my way, when I went in to the shop.
    >
    > The security-guard just stood there, a few meters away, and he didn’t tell
    > the boys-crowd to make passage for the custommers.
    >
    > So I had to kick some cartoon laying on the ground, to make a noise, to try
    > to make the boys move their bikes.
    >
    > Why does the security-guard get his pay?
    >
    > To just stand there looking at boys-crowds obstructing the custommers, like
    > an idiot?
    >
    > There was even a boy looking at me through the window when I picked up a
    > basket there.
    >
    > Tesco was invaded by bike-boys, and the security-guard just stood there
    > like an idiot, and didn’t try to break up the congestion.
    >
    > Also, this shop has two types of baskets.
    >
    > Half of the baskets are Sommerfield-baskets, and half of them are
    > Tesco-baskets.
    >
    > So there’s always a caos, in the check-out, since these baskets don’t mix.
    >
    > So always untidy basket-piles at the check-out.
    >
    > I’ve worked as a Shop Manager, and know these baskets aren’t that
    > expensive.
    >
    > In the chain I worked in, a company came once a year or so, to wash
    > baskets.
    >
    > Something unheard of in Tesco, I think, because some of these baskets are
    > really dirty and greasy etc.
    >
    > Also, the ailes in this Tesco are to long and to narrow.
    >
    > It’s always a congestion everywhere.
    >
    > I wish this shop could have been more like the Sainsbury’s-shop, in Rice
    > Lane.
    >
    > It’s really a much better shop in almost every way.
    >
    > Except for that the prices are a bit lower at Tesco for nudles, etc.
    >
    > Also, no self-service check-outs, in this shop, which other Tesco Metro
    > has.
    >
    > It’s fine with a Tesco Metro, but here you have put a Tesco Metro into an
    > ordinary Sommerfields-shop, I think, and it doesn’t really fit in.
    >
    > So custommers get stressed shopping in this shop, I think.
    >
    > How about making it bigger?
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    > ——————————
    > This is a confidential email. Tesco may monitor and record all emails. The
    > views expressed in this email are those of the sender and not Tesco.
    >
    > Tesco Stores Limited
    > Company Number: 519500
    > Registered in England
    > Registered Office: Tesco House, Delamare Road, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire EN8
    > 9SL
    > VAT Registration Number: GB 220 4302 31
    >

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til Samferdselsdepartementet


    Gmail – Oppdatering/Fwd: Klage på NSB

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Oppdatering/Fwd: Klage på NSB



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 12:27 AM

    To:
    postmottak@sd.dep.no

    Cc:
    Postmottak Sivilombudsmannen <postmottak@sivilombudsmannen.no>

    Hei,

    jeg glemte å sende med det skjembildet fra tracking-cookie-programmet, på bloggen min, som viser tullet, fra NSB.
    Så sender derfor denne oppdateringen.


    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Date: 2013/3/26
    Subject: Klage på NSB
    To: postmottak@sd.dep.no
    Cc: Postmottak Sivilombudsmannen <postmottak@sivilombudsmannen.no>

    Hei,

    hva er det NSB driver med?

    Jeg er en blåruss og japp.


    Jeg vil ha monetær erstatning, (altså penger), for dette tullet.

    Send en sjekk, på ti millioner kroner, i posten.

    Adressen min finnes her:

    Erik Ribsskog


    nsb gått fra konseptene.JPG
    144K

    PS.

    Her er vedlegget:

    nsb gått fra konseptene

  • Jeg sendte en e-post til Asda


    Gmail – Out of Office: Response from ASDA (Ref #000000037172872)

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Out of Office: Response from ASDA (Ref #000000037172872)



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Fri, Mar 22, 2013 at 10:50 PM

    To:
    Victoria Duffy <Victoria.Duffy@asda.co.uk>

    Hi,

    I write to you, since I can’t find Asda’s general enquiry e-mail address, on your website.

    I’m just back from Asda Walton now, after doing some shopping there.


    I have to say that the staff there shocks me.

    When I went to pay, for the goods, in my basket, at the self-service check-outs.

    I was met, by a ‘wall’ of people.

    Three women in their early twenties, and an older man.
    All slim.
    One of the women had an Amy Winehouse hairdo, (which was coloured in quite dark red).

    And one was a blonde.

    The third one could have been a brunette.


    And the man was quite slim and low.

    All these four were Asda-staff.

    And they blocked the passage to the self-service check-outs, as if to provoce me, I think.

    I could notice that the blonde Asda-woman noticed me when I walked from the newspaper-department, and towards the self service check-outs.

    The four staff didn’t move, when I approached them.


    They blocked my way, and didn’t move.

    I took one step to the side, as if to use the self-service check out with a transport-band on it.

    (Which I haven’t used earlier.

    And I would have been on dispay there, for the four staff, if I used it.


    So I didn’t really want to use this machine).
    Then the earlier mentioned Asda-man, moved away, toward the staffed tills.
    And then I could just sneak past the Amy Winehouse-hairdo Asda-woman, who seemed to be unaware of me wanting to pass her, it seemed to me.

    (Even if it seems odd to me, that people can be this un-aware.


    So I guess she acted, possibly).
    Then I went to scan the goods in my basket, in the self-service check-out.

    This shop, has a security-guard, seated, by the enterance-door.


    So why do you have four staff, obstructing the custommers, like this?

    This seems very odd, to me.


    Do you have some problem with mafia, nazi’s or ‘wicka-stuff’ in your shop.

    What on earth is going on?

    I know self-service check-outs have only been around, since 2005.


    (At least that’s when I first saw them, at a big Sainsbury’s shop.

    The one with a Starbucks-cafe in.
    In Kensington, in London).
    But what is really Asda’s policy regarding this?

    Are your staff meant to stand and obstruct the way, to the self-service tills, in a group, like I witnessed, at Asda Walton, earlier today?


    (At around 10 PM, I guess).
    Can you please inform me about Asda’s policy regaring this?
    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 5:17 PM, Victoria Duffy <Victoria.Duffy@asda.co.uk> wrote:

    Thank you for your email.

    I’m out of the office until Monday 04 March. All emails will be actioned on my return.

    If you need further assistance please contact our Customer Service Team on freephone 0800 952 0101.

    Kind regards

    Vicki Duffy
    ASDA Service Team