New York prosecutors said Thursday they are opening an investigation into a wireless network outage earlier this month that left thousands of AT&T customers across the U.S. without cellphone service for roughly 12 hours.
The February 22 outage, which also affected some Consumer Cellular, T-Mobile, UScellular and Verizon subscribers, led to widespread frustration by phone users and briefly disrupted 911 service in some communities.
"Nationwide outages are not just an inconvenience, they can be dangerous, and it's critical that we protect consumers when an outage occurs," New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement announcing the probe and inviting consumers in the state whose phone service was interrupted to file a complaint.
AT&T apologized this week for the network disruption and offered a $5 credit to customers. The credit will automatically be applied to their accounts, but AT&T Business, AT&T Prepaid and Cricket customers are ineligible for reimbursement.
Alain Sherter covers business and economic affairs for CBSNews.com.
Twitter2025-05-02 16:49510 view
2025-05-02 16:341300 view
2025-05-02 16:33664 view
2025-05-02 15:542936 view
2025-05-02 15:181184 view
2025-05-02 14:172819 view
Did AI just have a "Sputnik moment"?That's what someinvestors, after the little known Chinese startu
"Sopranos" and "White Lotus" actor Michael Imperioli says he's not allowing "bigots and homophobes"
Humvees with heavily armed county, state and federal agents rolled into what remained of the Oceti S