![]() Still, that leaves plenty of personal data which could be used for phishing and more. “We have no indication that the data contained in the stolen files included any customer financial information, credit card information, debit or other payment information,” T-Mobile insists. T-Mobile is working with law enforcement, and the investigation is still underway. The good news is that the access point which the carrier believes was used in the hack has now been closed. Earlier this week, T-Mobile confirmed, “a subset of T-Mobile data had been accessed by unauthorized individuals.” Word of the T-Mobile hack broke earlier this month, with the carrier saying that it had been alerted to the security breach amid claims that customer data was up for sale.
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