I dimly recall an earlier thread about receiving notice of rights to part of a settlement from a mfr. or service provider... seems Netfix has extended the deadline in the case I mentioned. An excerpt:
This settlement arises from a class action lawsuit entitled Chavez v. Netflix, Inc. that was filed in San Francisco Superior Court (case number CGC-04-434884) on September 23, 2004. The lawsuit alleges that Netflix failed to provide "unlimited" DVD rentals and "one day delivery" as promised in its marketing materials. Netflix has denied any wrongdoing or liability. The parties have reached, and the Court has approved, a settlement that they believe is in the best interests of the Class Members. Under the terms of the amended settlement, Netflix will provide eligible subscribers with the benefit described below.
Current Netflix Members: If you enrolled in a paid membership before January 15, 2005 and were a member as of October 19, 2005, you are eligible to receive a free one-month upgrade in service level. For example, if you are on the 3 DVDs at-a-time program, you will be upgraded to the 4 DVDs at-a-time program for one month. There will be no price increase during the upgraded month. The upgrade in service level will automatically end after one month and your subscription will return to the previous service level, unless you choose to continue at the higher service level and pay the regular subscription rate for that level after the upgraded month.
So, you see, the "offending" party is sometimes required to spread the word to their customers...
Much as I think this Chavez person was just being clever to try to grab some money, I might take a one-month upgrade... what the hell, they're offering. In the end, they can show this whole thing as a big fat loss for tax purposes.
I'm personally very happy with Netflix, at least as compared to the old way (standing on line with that stupid empty box, lousy selection, one out of three dics guaranteed to be scratched badly, racing to the rental store to return the movie and avoid the Mafia-style late fees, etc., etc.).
They're very rarely late (and that's more likely the USPS's fault), I've only had to return one disc due to damage, they're very lenient about lost discs, they get the new releases just ahead of the competition, and the selection is incredible.