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The FCC is fining Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint for allegedly illegally sharing users' location data with third parties.
The Federal Communications Commission has fined AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint a combined $200 million in penalties for illegally sharing access to customer location data without their consent.
AT&T was fined over $57 million, and Verizon was fined almost $47 million. T-Mobile and Sprint, which merged since the investigation began, have been fined $92 million collectively, the FCC said ...
WASHINGTON - Verizon Communications' wireless business will pay a $1.05 million fine to resolve an investigation into whether the company violated government rules by failing to deliver 911 calls ...
Verizon screwup caused 911 outage in 6 states—carrier agrees to $1M fine Verizon initially failed to remove a flawed update file that caused two outages.
The FCC has fined the major mobile carriers almost $200 Million after illegally sharing user location data.
Verizon has agreed to pay just over $1 million and implement a compliance plan to settle an FCC investigation over a 911 outage.
Verizon is facing a fine and other consequences from the FCC for a 911 outage in 2022. Here are all of the details.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a fine totaling $200 million to the nation’s four largest mobile carriers after concluding an investigation that found the companies illegally ...
Federal regulators fined wireless carriers Verizon VZ 1.40%, AT&T T 2.36%, T-Mobile TMUS 2.22% and Sprint nearly $200 million for sharing customer-location data without consent.
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