The Oklahoman

T-Mobile CEO ‘truly sorry’ for data hack

Sievert: Expectatio­ns for security were not met

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BELLEVUE, Wash. – T-Mobile said it notified nearly all of the millions of customers whose personal data was stolen and that it is “truly sorry” for the breach.

CEO Mike Sievert said in a statement Friday that the company spends lots of effort to stay ahead of criminal hackers “but we didn’t live up to the expectatio­ns we have for ourselves to protect our customers. Knowing that we failed to prevent this exposure is one of the hardest parts of this event.”

The company disclosed earlier in August that the names, Social Security numbers and informatio­n from driver’s licenses or other identification of just over 40 million people who applied for T-Mobile credit were exposed in a recent data breach. The same data for about 7.8 million current T-Mobile customers who pay monthly for phone service also appeared to be compromise­d.

Sievert’s statement follows a Thursday report in the Wall Street Journal in which John Binns, a 21-year-old American hacker living in Turkey, told the newspaper he was responsibl­e for the hack and blamed T-Mobile’s lax security for making it possible.

Binns told the Journal he discovered an unprotecte­d router exposed on the internet in July, and used that entry point to gain access to servers in a T-Mobile data center near East Wenatchee, Washington, a few hours east of the company’s headquarte­rs in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue.

Sievert made no direct reference to Binns on Friday but said that, “in short, this individual’s intent was to break in and steal data, and they succeeded.”

Sievert said the breach has been contained, the investigat­ion is “substantia­lly complete” and that customer financial informatio­n wasn’t exposed. He said TMobile hired cybersecur­ity experts from Mandiant to help with the investigat­ion and is coordinati­ng with law enforcemen­t.

“What we can share is that, in simplest terms, the bad actor leveraged their knowledge of technical systems, along with specialize­d tools and capabiliti­es, to gain access to our testing environmen­ts and then used brute force attacks and other methods to make their way into other IT servers that included customer data,” Sievert wrote.

Sievert said the company has notified “just about every” current customer who was affected, and is now doing the same for former customers and prospectiv­e customers who might have supplied some personal informatio­n in applying for an account. Unaffected customers will see a banner on their T-Mobile online account page letting them know their data was not exposed.

T-Mobile became one of the country’s largest cellphone service carriers, along with AT&T and Verizon, after buying rival Sprint last year. It reported having a total of 102.1 million U.S. customers after the merger.

T-Mobile has previously disclosed a number of data breaches over the years, though the most recent was the largest. Sievert said the company is taking steps to improve its security.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission, which regulates wireless carriers, has said it is investigat­ing the breach.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE ?? T-Mobile said earlier this month that customers’ first and last names, date of birth, Social Security numbers and driver’s license/ID informatio­n were exposed in a data breach.
KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP FILE T-Mobile said earlier this month that customers’ first and last names, date of birth, Social Security numbers and driver’s license/ID informatio­n were exposed in a data breach.

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