Credit for owning the scope of the problem (allowing serious discrepancies for 3 years), which is sure to cost them trust from the community. But the skeptic in me reminds me that it's likely there was no way out of admitting it.
What disheartens me is that the documentation discrepancy caused real, extremely substantial aggregate monetary impact on customers, yet there is no mention of refunds. Perhaps that will come, but in my opinion, anything short of that is just damage control.
This is a time excessively demonstrate integrity, for them to go above and beyond. It's in their interest not to just paper over the whole thing.
What disheartens me is that the documentation discrepancy caused real, extremely substantial aggregate monetary impact on customers, yet there is no mention of refunds. Perhaps that will come, but in my opinion, anything short of that is just damage control.
This is a time excessively demonstrate integrity, for them to go above and beyond. It's in their interest not to just paper over the whole thing.