I spoke with Verizon Customer Service on the phone to re-up my contract for two years. I was told that my current channel line-up called "Essentials" was equivalent with the new channel line-up called "Extreme", but that I could change to the "Prime" channel line-up for a discount of $5 which would bring my bundle total to $99.99/month. The Verizon representative read me a list of the channels I would lose by changing to Prime. She said "American Life, 2 versions of BBC, BET Gospel, BIO, and Style". I wrote them all down. I asked if I could get a new DVR. She told me yes and that the monthly cost of the single-room DVR was $12.99/month. When I received an e-mail from Verizon it said the new bundle price was $109.99. I called customer support again and was told that the I could be issued a $10/month credit for the first year, but that the cost of the DVR is $16.99/month ($4/mo more than I was quoted over the phone the first time). The following day when the changes took effect we discovered the Boomerang channel is no longer in our line-up, but Verizon Customer service had already closed for the day. 2 days after renewing my contract I called Verizon Customer Service a 3rd time and was told it would now cost $10/month more to upgrade to the Extreme channel package from the Prime channel package instead of the $5 it would have cost 2 days prior. I have had Fios service for 4 years and this is the 3rd time that the information provided by the Verizon Customer Service telephone personnel did not match the price and content that was provided. Since there have been so many errors on so few transactions, I can't help but wonder how widespread are these deceiving practices? As a solution to my most current problem I would like to upgrade to the Prime channels for the additional $5/month as promised in the initial phone call. As a solution to the frequency of problems with customer service I would like Verizon to implement a system in which customers agree to their packages in some recorded fashion (either a verbal recording, an e-mail with ALL the account details, on-line, or on paper) before changes are locked in.