Verizon is reportedly raising prices on its family plans with 5 or more lines. The discount per line would drop by $3 per line, meaning you’d pay at least $15 more a month for five lines or even more for those with larger accounts than this. The price change will reportedly take place on February 20.
The FBI has raised concerns over a significant data breach of ATTs (NYSE:T) systems last year, potentially exposing months of agents call and text logs. The breach, disclosed by Bloomberg News, compromised FBI
A price hike is coming for folks with five or more lines on current plans and those still holding on to venerable plans no longer offered.
AT&T will waive overage charges for prepaid and postpaid customers affected by the wildfires through February 6th. The company notes that customers in parts of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, and Ventura counties may experience home phone and internet disruptions due to power outages in the area.
It's been a long time coming, but Verizon and AT&T are reportedly at the point where their 5G SA networks are almost ready for the big time.
Two of the largest telecom providers in the U.S. said the China-government sponsored threat group is no longer embedded in their networks.
Verizon has "contained" impacts from the Salt Typhoon hack, allegedly perpetrated by a hacking group backed by the Chinese government.
Lauren elaborates and explains how she discovered the company while watching a video. After contacting them and taking advantage of a promotion, she was able to bring her bill down from $90 to $30. She also adds that a major stipulation is that your phone has to be paid off.
In a report released on January 14, Laurent Yoon from Bernstein maintained a Buy rating on AT&T (T – Research Report), with a price target
Verizon stock offers a 7% yield for income investors, with Q4 revenue projections driven by iPhone launch and strong cash flow metrics. Read the earnings preview on Seeking Alpha.
Fast-Track SWIFT is an expedited process designed for single-issue advertising cases brought to the National Advertising Division (NAD). AT&T challenged T-Mobile’s “Holidays Are Coming in Hot” commercial, in which T-Mobile advertises that prospective customers save 20% every month in service costs compared to AT&T and Verizon.
Rich DeMuro takes a look at how communications companies are keeping the signal alive for first responders and the community in areas destroyed by fire. More Rich: Follow Rich: