City
Epaper

T-Mobile agrees to pay $350 mn in data breach affecting 77 mn users

By IANS | Updated: July 23, 2022 12:05 IST

San Francisco, July 23 Telecommunications company T-Mobile has agreed to pay $500 million to settle a class-action lawsuit ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 23 Telecommunications company T-Mobile has agreed to pay $500 million to settle a class-action lawsuit in a 2021 data breach that impacted nearly 76.6 million users' data in the US.

T-Mobile will put $350 million into a settlement fund to go to lawyers, fees, and the affected, according to the proposed agreement filled on Friday.

The company will also spend an extra $150 million on "data security and related technology" during 2022 and 2023, reports The Verge.

In August last year, the company admitted its systems were hacked into, including social security numbers, names, addresses, and driver's license information.

The settlement covers "the approximately 76.6 million US residents identified by T- Mobile whose information was compromised in the Data Breach".

Initially, T-Mobile had admitted that nearly 47.8 million customers were affected in a latest data breach.

T-Mobile, which has more than 100 million customers, said its preliminary analysis found that approximately 7.8 million current T-Mobile postpaid customer accounts' information appears to be contained in the stolen files, as well as just over 40 million records of former or prospective customers who had previously applied for credit with T-Mobile.

Reports surfaced that hackers were selling the T-Mobile data for six Bitcoins ($270,000) on the Dark Web.

T-Mobile has been the target of several data breaches in the last few years.

In December last year, T-Mobile confirmed that recent reports of a new data breach are linked to notifications sent to a "very small number of customers" who fell victim to SIM swap attacks.

The recent cyberattack came after the massive data breach the company suffered in August.

Another report claimed recently that T-Mobile is allegedly selling user information to marketers. However, customers have the option to check which companies have access to their data and can opt-out entirely.

T-Mobile's new programme is called App Insights, and it is now fully operational after spending a year in beta, citing Ad Exchanger, The Verge reported.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: usSan FranciscoSan francisco bayT-mobileJose d'saT-mobile sidekickInternational business & gamesLte & broadbandKg international
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSan Francisco Earthquake: 4.3 Magnitude Tremor Jolts Bay Area at 3 AM, No Tsunami Threat

InternationalIndian-Origin Man Beheaded In US In Front Of Family After Violent Dispute

BusinessAnil Ambani’s Reliance Power and Reliance Infra Shares Zoom Even as Indian Markets Tumble Amid US Tariffs

InternationalMissouri House Blast: 5 Injured After Huge Explosion Damages 20 Homes in St Louis County

InternationalHurricane Erin Enters Into Category 2 Storm With Maximum Winds of 100 mph, Heavy Rainfall Over Caribbean Islands Likely

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyCommerce Secretary unveils skill courses on tea sommeliers, tasting

TechnologyIndian pharma exports expected to cross $30bn this year, rise sharply by 2030: Minister

TechnologyGovt asks e-commerce firms why prices went up despite GST cuts

TechnologyIndia Inc. credit ratio rose to 2.56 times in H1FY26: Report

TechnologyED raids 6 Reliance Infrastructure-linked premises in Indore and Mumbai over FEMA probe