T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint and AT&T say they will appeal against ‘excessive’ fines meted out by US regulator

The Federal Communications Commission on Monday fined the largest US wireless carriers nearly $200m for illegally sharing access to customers’ location information.

The FCC is finalizing fines first proposed in February 2020, including $80m for T-Mobile; $12m for Sprint, which T-Mobile has since acquired; $57m for AT&T, and nearly $47m for Verizon.

The carriers sold “real-time location information to data aggregators, allowing this highly sensitive data to wind up in the hands of bail-bond companies, bounty hunters, and other shady actors”, the FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement.

  • @glimse
    link
    145 months ago

    When will those affected be receiving some of that

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      95 months ago

      Hahahahahahahahagagagahahahahahahahahahahahahahahha. Uuuuhhhhhggggggg. Aaaaahahahahahahahahahahaaaa

      • @glimse
        link
        05 months ago

        Damn the FCC forsending guns to Israel!

  • @FluorideMind
    link
    105 months ago

    It should be 10k per user effected minimum.

  • @Tronn4
    link
    English
    75 months ago

    How come the FCC gets millions while the company customers get a year of credit monitoring?

  • Jubei Kibagami
    link
    75 months ago

    So, the phone bill is going up to pay this, right?

    • @Burn_The_Right
      link
      25 months ago

      A very gentle, soft, playful slap.on the wrist. The court is letting them know it’s OK to do as long as they pay a small tax on it if they are caught. Definitely still worth it.

  • @Maggoty
    link
    15 months ago

    But remember kids, it was TikTok that was the problem.