Steve Kovach October 19, 2016 at 08:02AM
T-Mobile will have to pay $48 million in fines and customer benefits after reaching a settlement with the FCC over the way the wireless carrier promoted its unlimited data plans.
T-Mobile's unlimited data plans don't charge you for going over a certain data limit, but the carrier can slow down connection speeds after you reach a certain threshold.
After receiving complaints, the FCC determined that T-Mobile's marketing language on its data plans wasn't entirely clear.
Moving forward, T-Mobile will have to change its messaging to clarify that heavy data users may have their data speeds slowed down.
T-Mobile's CEO praised the settlement in a tweet:
Good settlement with FCC today. @TMobile believes more info is best for customers. #themoreyouknow https://t.co/XFY6dHPfN6
— John Legere (@JohnLegere) October 19, 2016
AT&T paid a $100 million settlement with the FCC last year in a similar case.
Here's your regular reminder that there is no such thing as an unlimited data plan anymore. Even if carriers promise not to charge you more for going over a data limit, they can and will slow your data speeds down to a crawl until the next billing cycle.
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T-Mobile reached a $48 million settlement with the FCC over its misleading 'unlimited' data plans from Business Insider: Steve Kovach
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