this post was submitted on 20 Sep 2024
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AT&T Unofficial Lemmy Community

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Unofficial Lemmy Community for all things related to AT&T Wireless.

This Lemmy community is based on the r/att subreddit.

Any moderator of r/att that would like moderator access here feel free to send me a message.

Rules (currently copied from the AT&T subreddit):

  1. Personal/Internal Information

Do not publicly post personal information. Do not post proprietary information, or CSP articles.

  1. Ethics & Legality

Do not post anything unethical, illegal, or politically charged.

  1. Attacks & Degradation

Do not post anything attacking or degrading to someone else. Keep it civil, this includes the overuse of profanity in a post.

  1. Location

Do tell us where you are from when necessary, so we can help you. Don't post your street address, but city & state can help us help you.

  1. Soliciting/Spam/DM request

No Soliciting, SPAM posts or Direct Message requests. This sub is not a marketplace. Do not solicit services as a representative of AT&T or attempt to buy or sell anything on behalf of yourself or another company here. There are other places on Reddit dedicated to those topics. Spam or self promotion posts will be Removed. This includes your referral codes

  1. Rants

Please try to avoid ranting. Posts made solely to complain will be removed. Please ask a question or make a suggestion and let us try to help you.

  1. This place isn't official

Keep in mind this community is not managed by AT&T, however, it does contain many knowledgeable Redditors who can help.

  1. Leave Lily out of this

Do not post about Lily. This sub is about AT&T services, not an actress.

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AT&T agreed to pay a $13 million fine because it gave customer bill information to a vendor in order to create personalized videos, then allegedly failed to ensure that the vendor destroyed the data when it was no longer needed. In addition to the fine, AT&T agreed in a consent decree announced today by the Federal Communications Commission to stricter controls on sharing data with vendors.

In January 2023, years after the data was supposed to be destroyed, the vendor suffered a breach "when threat actors accessed the vendor's cloud environment and ultimately exfiltrated AT&T customer information," the FCC said. Information related to 8.9 million AT&T wireless customers was exposed.

Phone companies are required by law to protect customer information, and AT&T should not have merely relied on third-party firms' assurances that they destroyed data when it was no longer needed, the FCC said.

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[–] PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

8.9 million peoples’ private info is stolen, and AT&T gets a fine of $13 million. That’s $1.46 per person.

Congrats, the identity theft that ruined your credit for nearly a decade and has you hounded by collections agents every day is worth less than tree fiddy.

[–] skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 1 month ago

Really hope America's corporate fines are someday impactful in any meaning way. That alone would fix so many problems with the loose morals of those people named "corporation" without having to do much else.

It's not even malicious really. It would happen once, and suddenly companies would start acting non-shitty like they sometimes do in history.

Much less drama too.