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There is another breach at T-mobile, any customers effected?

Are you effected by the t-mobile breach that is now coming to light? The article is written today, January 4, 2021: and this looks to be quite interesting as this isn’t the first by the looks of things.

Here are three paragraphs.

T-Mobile says that it “recently identified and quickly shut down” a data breach that included call-related information about some accounts.

The wireless telecommunication firm said in a notice mailed to some customers in late December that the incident “may have included phone number, number
of lines subscribed to on your account and, in some cases, call-related information collected as part of the normal operation of your wireless service.”

It’s the fourth data breach that the company has acknowledged within the last three years. T-Mobile, which completed a merger with Sprint in April 2020,
also disclosed incidents that occurred in March 2020, November 2019 and August 2018.

I’m happy that they identified this 4th breach quickly, what about the other three? The article continues:

The company called the intrusion “malicious, unauthorized access,” but did not release details about the suspected intruders or their methods. Personally
identifiable information was not affected in this latest breach, T-Mobile said.

“The data accessed did not include names on the account, physical or email addresses, financial data, credit card information, social security numbers,
tax ID, passwords, or PINs,” the company said, adding that it had contacted cybersecurity experts and federal law enforcement about the breach

Even though it doesn’t have personal information involved, we learn:

The affected data is known as customer proprietary network information, and although it might not contain the names or other identifying information of customers, the Federal Communications Commission still considers it sensitive in nature.

If you’re a t-mobile customer, the boards await youT-Mobile: Breach exposed call information for some customers is the article in question.

By Jared Rimer

I'm the webmaster of jaredrimer.net where I also have a tech blog and othe things as well.