A class action settlement was approved in a case against T-Mobile US, Inc. and T-Mobile USA, Inc. relating to a data breach that T-Mobile announced on August 16, 2021. Preliminary Approval of the Proposed Settlement was granted on July 26, 2022. Final Approval was granted on June 29, ...
The settlement T-Mobile has agreed to pay $350 million to settle multiple class-action suits stemming from the 2021 data breach. In a Securities and Exchange Commissionfiling, T-Mobile said the funds would pay for claims by class members, the legal fees of the plaintiffs’ counsel, and the...
T-Mobile will have 10 days to put money in the fund to cover the costs of notifying people who are eligible to claim. According to the settlement, that covers “the approximately 76.6 million U.S. residents identified by T- Mobile whose information was compromised in the Data Breach,” ...
T-Mobile has proposed a settlement of $500 million to end a class-action lawsuit following the August 2021 customer data breach. In August 2021, it was reported that millions of customer accounts were stolen from T-Mobile, accounts that were then attempted to be sold via hacker forums....
READ MORE: How to collect up to $358 following theYahoo data breach settlement The company added the breach, reported to have impacted approximately 200,000 customers, did not include financial information, such as names on the account, credit card information, social security numbers,...
Who will receive settlement payments? T-Mobile identified about76.6 millionU.S. residents affected in the 2021 data breach. This group includes current and “former or prospective” customers, the companyconfirmed. How much will they receive?
T-Mobilesaid the settlement contains no admission of liability, wrongdoing or responsibility by any of the defendants. The company said that it expects court approval of the terms of the settlement as early as December 2022. Nearly 80 million U.S. residents were affected by the breach. In add...
Communications giantT-Mobilesaid today it is investigating the extent of a breach that hackers claim has exposed sensitive personal data on 100 million T-Mobile USA customers, in many cases including the name, Social Security number, address, date of birth, phone number, security PINs and details...
The company adds that "Verizon and AT&T market this as 'Premium Data' and give most customers 50GB. But, there’s nothing premium about paying more for fast 5G that’s only in 'some parts of some cities.'" Sign up to get the BEST of Tom's Guide direct to your inbox. Get in...
Until we get a ruling in that lawsuit filed by the dozen-and-half or so states — or a settlement — yes. Sprint customers will continue to get their service from Sprint, T-Mobile customers will continue to do business with the Uncarrier, and Dish will bide its time, waiting to enter...