Houston Chronicle

T-Mobile goes silent after network outage

- By Scott Moritz and Todd Shields

T-Mobile US had its first big network meltdown since leapfroggi­ng AT&T to become the No. 2 wireless carrier in the U.S., and the company’s response has been uncharacte­ristically quiet.

As many as 68 million of T-Mobile’s wireless customers had their service disrupted for several hours Monday as the company tried to identify the problem and restore service.

The company said the outage was caused by “router” issues. TMobile’s parent company, Deutsche Telekom AG, said Tuesday that it was related to 5G network upgrades. But the carrier is still sorting through the chain of events that caused the breakdown and has yet to provide an update. In the meantime, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission has vowed to investigat­e the matter.

It’s the first big test for the new company, which absorbed Sprint Corp. in April after a two-year battle for regulatory clearance. And it puts the company’s new CEO, Mike Sievert, in the spotlight — though, for now, he has yet to comment on the causes of the problem. (He has retweeted remarks from his technology chief and told customers on Monday that he appreciate­d their patience while the company worked on the issue.)

“The T-Mobile network outage is unacceptab­le,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai tweeted Monday evening when he announced the agency would launch an investigat­ion. “We’re demanding answers — and so are American consumers.”

At 12:03 a.m. CDT, T-Mobile’s technology head Neville Ray tweeted to say service was fixed.

The timing is especially awkward for T-Mobile, since it just spent two years assuring regulators that joining forces with Sprint would bring a robust network. But it’s not uncommon for the FCC to probe outages. Regulators look for ways to prevent future problems and hand out fines for some mishaps.

After a CenturyLin­k Inc. fibernetwo­rk outage in December 2018 caused more than 12 million blocked or degraded phone calls and at least 886 dropped calls to 911, the FCC issued a report and didn’t fine the company.

As many as 22 million customers in 39 states were affected by the outage, which lasted almost 37 hours and was caused by a malfunctio­ning switching module, according to the Aug. 19 report. Pai said the FCC planned to reach out to telecommun­ications providers to promote best network practices.

The FCC in 2018 settled an investigat­ion into widespread outages of emergency 911 calling for AT&T’s wireless customers, saying the company agreed to a $5.25 million fine and changes in its system to reduce the likelihood of outages.

CenturyLin­k agreed to pay a $400 million civil penalty and enter into a compliance plan after a 911-calling outage in August 2018, when a technician made an error during the course of a routine configurat­ion change.

Anne Veigle, an FCC spokeswoma­n, said the agency had no comment beyond Pai’s Monday evening tweet.

T-Mobile is known for its brash marketing, and Sievert has been a big part of that. As chief marketing officer and later head of operations, he orchestrat­ed the “uncarrier” campaign, which featured no contracts, unlimited data plans and free taco Tuesdays. The promotions helped attract millions of new subscriber­s.

But now the company has what it wanted — the scale that came with the $26.5 billion Sprint deal — and the pressure is higher to show it can be more than an upstart.

 ?? Dreamstime / Tribune News Service ?? As many as 68 million T-Mobile customers had their service disrupted for several hours on Monday. The FCC is expected to investigat­e.
Dreamstime / Tribune News Service As many as 68 million T-Mobile customers had their service disrupted for several hours on Monday. The FCC is expected to investigat­e.

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