On January 22, 2023, T-Mobile was sued in federal court in California alleging negligence, unjust enrichment, breach of express contract, breach of implied contract, and invasion of privacy over the recently-disclosed data breach of more than 37 million postpaid and prepaid customer records. ...
The cell phone carrier said the access point bad actors used to illegally gain entry to its servers was located and closed, but the company's investigation into the breach is ongoing. In this April 3, 2020 file photo storefront doors with a logo of T-mobile, in Zutphen, Netherlands. ...
T-Mobile has suffered another customer data breach, as reported earlier Monday by Bleeping Computer. While this one is very small -- affecting just over 800 people -- it follows a massive data breach impacting millions of people in January that prompted questions about T-Mobile's cybersecurity...
The announcement marks a worst-case scenario after the reports last week of a T-Mobile breach. The company at the time looked to mitigate the loss by playing down the amount of data stolen. At this point, however, the carrier has decided that enough sensitive information was sto...
The company said Monday that it has confirmed there was unauthorized access to “some T-Mobile data” but was still determining the scope of the breach and who was affected. It also said it was confident that it has closed the entry point used to gain access. ...
T-Mobile said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that the breach was discovered Jan. 5. It said the data exposed to theft — based on its investigation to date — did not include passwords or PINs, bank account or credit card in
T-Mobile has confirmed it has suffered a data breach following reports that information for 100 million customers is for sale online. News broke yesterday that a hacker was trying to sell T-Mobile customer information. The hacker claimed to have gained access to T-Mobile servers, copying and ...
T-Mobile's identity-theft-protection page for people affected by the company's massive data breach asks only for an email address and phone number, meaning anyone can try to sign up.
T-Mobile has beenhitby a number ofdata breachesin recent years. The company willsoon pay $350 millionto settle customer claims from a class action lawsuit stemming from a data breach. The company is also in the middle of a major, multi-year cybersecurity overhaul. ...
This is the second security breach T-Mobile discloses in the last six months, after a first incident in November 2019.