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The Federal Trade Commission is sending partial refunds to consumers totaling nearly $6.3 million stemming from the FTC’s lawsuit against AT&T Mobility LLC for misleading customers about its unlimited data plans.
The 51-page AT&T data breach lawsuit says the personal information of 7.6 million current customers and 65.4 million former customers—approximately 73 million people—was stolen by cybercriminals because the company stored the data in a “reckless manner.”
Former AT&T customers may be eligible to claim a refund from the $7 million remaining in a fund created to settle allegations that the wireless provider charged for “unlimited” data plans while reducing their data speeds, a practice known as throttling.
Dallas-based AT&T has agreed to a $13 million settlement over a data breach that occurred in a January 2023, the Federal Communications Commission announced Tuesday. Why it matters: The ...
The FTC sued AT&T, and the company agreed to settle. According to the FTC’s lawsuit, AT&T unfairly reduced data speeds for customers with unlimited data plans, a practice known as “data throttling.”
Are you a former AT&T unlimited data plan customer? Read on. Today, the FTC announced a new claims process to return money to thousands of former AT&T customers as a result of a $60 million settlement with AT&T. To date, $52 million has already been refunded.
The company said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission it learned in April that customer data was illegally downloaded from an AT&T workspace on a third-party cloud...
If you received a data breach notification letter from AT&T, you are affected. Follow the link below to find out if you may be eligible for compensation.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is trying to get the word out about a $60 million settlement with AT&T, after regulators sued the wireless carrier for “unfairly” slowing down service for...
If you're a former AT&T customer, you may be owed part of a $60 million settlement addressing claims the carrier intentionally slowed data speeds without proper notification. But today is your...