Hello folks,
i’m on the prowl for articles, and I say that T-Mobile say no to the price hike they want to do.
While I’m not a customer, I know that this could be a big deal to some people, but this is not why I’m against the price hike.
Back in 2023, I believe I blogged about their 6th breach in as many years. Then they want to switch plans on people because they could. This is covered in the article that we’re going to link to.
Not only did they have many breaches within a period of time, they had the nerve to send me a letter offering me a line for $27. This blog posts talks about that and this blog post covers the letter.
On top of that, they have issues with sim swapping too. This blog post covers that too.
I’m not saying for one minute that T-Mobile is the only one that has sim swapping issues, but all of this could impact one’s decision to decide who to have service with. Remember, no one company is immune to the breach, its what you do after the breach that I’m more concerned with. \
As I said during TSB’s open forum, (blog post coming soon) I’m waiting for yet another T-Mobile breach.
I think we’re overdue on this, and yet they want to raise their prices for “older plans.” (in quotes)
What would it matter if you decided to raise prices only $2-$5 with all of this we know about the company. Oh yes, most of your customers have no idea that you’ve been breached numerous times, tried to get back your data by paying the actors, and profusely apologizing that a good chunk of your data is now long gone.
They’re raising their prices because of inflation they say, but I bet it is to recoop the money they lost paying the hackers, paying money to “protect people” after the fact with credit monitoring, and other aspects.
The article is titled T-Mobile imposes $5 monthly price hike on customers using older plans is the article you need to read if you are a T-Mobile customer.
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