I expect another 5-year PureVPN license now and every 5 years until such time as I choose to no longer continue the service. The original license you provided me was a 5-year term. I do not accept the so-called offer to breach our agreement. By offering an alternative service, you are effectively arguing impossibility, however no such impossibility exists: you can still provide me with the PureVPN service, you simply are choosing not to. You are attempting a unilateral change without offering additional consideration. While there certainly are times in which the terms of a contract can be altered, you have not met any such conditions. To attempt to change the terms of the arrangement now after having been accepted and partially-performed is in violation of both contract and consumer laws in pretty much every state in the US, including my own. Thus far, we are 5 years into the lifetime service offering. The terms were a lifetime license for PureVPN services to be made available to me. You accepted my payment and began performance in 2017. That contract was offered and accepted in 2017. Stackcommerce agreed to provide access to a service for which I paid an agreed-upon price. Here is the specific language I used after they offered the "one-time 2-year extension" that got the ticket escalated: I was just informed that I would be getting a 5-year extension and could get additional 5-year extensions for the lifetime of the product. I again declined, at which point they escalated the ticket. I declined the alternative at which point they offered me a one-time 2-year extension on the condition I was waiving any future extensions. After doing so, like with others, Stackcommerce told me they could not do the "lifetime" subscription for PureVPN and offered me an alternative, KeepSolid VPN. I first put in a ticket with PureVPN and they instructed me to submit a ticket to Stackcommerce. So I just went through this experience when my PureVPN "lifetime" subscription lapsed.
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