| T-Mobile: Hackers Accessed Data on More Than 40 Million People T-Mobile says approximately  7.8 million current T-Mobile postpaid customer accounts and just over 40  million records of former or prospective customers were breached. By  Nathaniel Mott &  Chloe Albanesius
 Updated August 18, 2021
 
 UPDATE 8/18: T-Mobile today confirmed that the  personal information of millions of current, former, and prospective  customers was stolen from its systems in a recent hack.
 
 "Our  preliminary analysis is that approximately 7.8 million current T-Mobile  postpaid customer accounts’ information appears to be contained in the  stolen files, as well as just over 40 million records of former or  prospective customers who had previously applied for credit with  T-Mobile," T-Mobile said in a statement.
 
 Postpaid and Prospective T-Mobile Customers"For  a subset of current and former post-pay customers and prospective  T-Mobile customers," accessed data includes customers’ first and last  names, date of birth, Social Security numbers, and driver’s license/ID  information, T-Mobile says. Phone numbers, account numbers, PINs,  passwords, or financial information were not compromised in any of those  files, it says.
 
 T-Mobile recommends that postpaid customers  change their PIN via their T-Mobile account or by calling 611 on their  phones, though "we have no knowledge that any postpaid account PINs were  compromised," it says.
 
 Prepaid T-Mobile CustomersAbout  850,000 active T-Mobile prepaid customer names, phone numbers, and  account PINs were also exposed. Those PINs have been reset and T-Mobile  will contact affected customers.
 
 Some "additional information"  from inactive prepaid accounts was also breached, but "no customer  financial information, credit card information, debit or other payment  information or [Social Security numbers were] in this inactive file,"  T-Mobile says.
 
 Metro by T-Mobile, Sprint, and BoostMetro by T-Mobile, former Sprint prepaid, and Boost customers did not have their names or PINs exposed, T-Mobile says...
 
 pcmag.com
 |