T-Mobile
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1 stars | | (349) |
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Category: Services
Contact Information 9838 Kester Ave., North Hills, California, United States
Phone number: 626-318-8131
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T-Mobile Reviews
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ValeriAPrater
September 17, 2009
Charges to account after it was closed
You have appearantly been hired by T-Mobile to collect on charges incurred after I closed my account.
The day I was no longer bound by a contract with T-Mobile, I transfered the primary number ending in 4877 immediately to a vorizon account and dropped service to the second phone 4878 entirely at the same time. I no longer held a contract of any kind with T-Mobile, the account was closed entirely. No T-Mobile service of anykind to either number. No account of any kind with T-Mobile open in my name.
One month later, I receive a bill from T-Mobile for charges on the 4878 number incurred after I closed the account.
After much bafflement and research, I got to the bottom of it.
A T-Mobile agent in a Mall outlet had coached the individual holding the now non functioning 7878 number on how to avoid paying a $200.00 deposit she could not afford for her own T-Mobile account. If she could give him my Social Security number, he could restore service to the 7878 number.
The individual being young and ignorant did just that. Upon returning to him with my SS#(acquiring it without my knowledge or consent), the agent reopened the account in my name, without my consent, for an individual he knew was presenting a Social Security number belonging to some one else. This was a highly fraudulent transaction, encouraged and perpetrated by a T-Mobile agent. I emmediately contacted my attorney who addressed this issue twice with T-Mobile. It was our understanding the matter was closed at that time, and I was not responsible for the bill incurred after I had closed the account in its entirety at the end of my contract.
Why this is still an issue is beyond me. Should T-Mobile persist, I will once again acquire an attorney, ultimately at T-Mobile's expense.
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TiffanyTiffany
September 12, 2009
Very Poor Customer Service
Iceatra, employee number 0341279, will never answer any of your questions. Instead, she will yell over you, blame you, and not listen to any of your concerns.
I have been a loyal T-Mobile consumer for the last few years; however, I will never again use T-Mobile because they do not care about their customers. Tonight, I called T-Mobile because I was receiving unsolicited calls from a private number at odd hours in the night. After speaking to a T-Mobile customer representative regarding my problem, he advised me that I could opt to add a "Family Allowance" option onto my plan and randomly select any number from the phone book and in addition to that number I randomly selected, T-Mobile would block all private numbers from calling me. He advised me that this was a great option to resolve my problem of unsolicited private number prank calls. However, this option included a fee which I did not feel was warranted given the fact that it was a T-mobile number these unsolicited calls were targeting, and on no part of my own or any bad faith on my part were these private numbers calling me. I asked to speak to his supervisor regarding a waiver of the fee. Iceatra, employee #0341279, answered the phone and immediately told me that I was speaking in circles. She refused to answer any of my direction questions, but instead constantly re-informed me that I was "speaking in circles." I asked her why I could not receive a fee waiver regarding this "family allowance" program given that I did not in any way cause this problem, she immediately cut me off and yelled over me to tell me that I was "speaking in circles." She purposely refused to answer my direct, clear, and concise question. Instead, she yelled at me, was extremely rude and unprofessional, and continued to avoid all my questions.
Iceatra, employee number 034127, was rude, unprofessional, and refused to help me in any way. I have been a loyal customer to T-Mobile for the last few years; however, this October when my plan expires, I will be sure to switch providers because of this incident.
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jmswykoff
September 7, 2009
Dash (Black)
I switched my cell company from Sprint to T-Mobile because of the service. I now am having tons of problems with T-Mobile.
Let me start by saying I have major heart issues and depend on my cell phone for doctors calling me if there is a problem with my defibulator/pacemaker.
I have the T-Mobile Dash (Black) which is made by HTC. The phone has an windows update feature that now gives me an error message. I keep getting told by T-Mobile that the phone has no update and that is why it is not working. If that is true than why am I getting an "Error" message???? Second, I have had a replacement phone, battery, and SIM card. My phone sometimes doesn't ring through on my phone when people call, don't recieve E-mails, texts, and dies when ever it feels like it.
I have called customer care, talked to the stores, talked to corporate and even filed a BBB complaint. I can't seem to get anyone to do anything about the phone not functioning the way it should.
I will be serverly pissed if a hospital tries to call me to say they have a heart for me ( since I need a transplant) and I miss out on it due to the lack of the phone working..
DO NOT GO WITH T-MOBILE. NOT EVEN IF YOU HAVE A GUN TO YOUR HEAD. IT'S NOT WORTH THE TROUBLE!!!
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David
August 31, 2009
Fake email received
Customer Services
Head Office
T-Mobile (UK) Ltd
6 xxxxxxxx Way
xxxxxxxxTechnology Park
xxxxx
xxx3 xxx
United Kingdom.
We bring to your notice your winning prize from T-MOBILE BONANZA held through Internet ballot System among 25, 000 Microsoft users.
You are hereby entitled to 500, 000 GBP (Five Hundred Thousand Pounds) winning no: 7230.
To file for your claim, Please contact our customer services for validation.
Endeavor to email them the following information’s for immediate Processing:
Full Names:
Address:
Sex:
Age:
Country:
Phone no:
Amount Won:
Winning no:
Please send these info to our T- Mobile Bonanza claim Agent below:
Mr. Johnson Wright
Email: [email protected]
Congratulations once again from our members of staff and thank you for being
part of our promotional program.
Send us an email When completing our forms please remember to include your
T-Mobile Winning no. to help us assist you with your winnings.
Best Regards,
Sward Brown.
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paybac
August 30, 2009
termination of service
I had T-mobile for just about a year and I signed up for 600 minutes a month and 100mb of internet and my monthly bill was 68.94 a month. I don't use the cell phone much ( on average 15 minutes a month ) and in July I was sent a notice from T-mobile saying my service was being cancelled on 8-18-09 because of a large amount of roaming eventhough I had only use the phone a total of 16 minutes in July. Well on 8-18-09 I figured the service would be stopped but it wasn't so for the month of August I tried not to use the phone anytime it was roaming and my total roaming for this month was 1 minute. I got a letter from them 2 days ago saying again that my service would be cancelled but this time it was for 9-18-09. I called them and asked how 1 minute of roaming time was enough for them to cancell me but all I was told was they were within their rights to cancell my service for ( any ) reason so I had them shut the phone off. For anyone thinking of getting T-Mobile think hard and try to get someone else.
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compsvce
August 21, 2009
Sidekick Prepaid Plan
Sidekick t-mobile prepaid plan is not a bill or account available on the minutes used. One cannot review account other than what they say on the phone. I spent hours on the phone without any results.
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Cell Phone Rip off
August 12, 2009
Bad Cell phones poor quality
I have paid over $200.00 for telephones from T-Mobile and Alltel. They are pieces of junk. They do not last over a year. The charger quits working or the battery becomes disfunctional. Then the company wants to sell you a new phone with a 2 year contract. I will be looking for a new cell phone company. I am hoping to find a company with higher goals than ripping me off. The people at the service center are awful. I spent 2 hours there combined for the 2 times I had to go there. The women clerks were unprofessional and flirting with the men customers if they were young and attractive and the same with the young man clerk. He was with one female customer for the whole hour I was there this PM. Other people were complaining and leaving. Other people meaning those of us that were over 50 and unattractive to the young clerks running the store. I hope I never have to go back again!
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lisandrasantiques
August 7, 2009
Horrible Customer Service
Holy crap! This company should not be in business with their horrendous customer service and straight out lies they tell. I tried to add minutes to my account BEFORE my current minutes expired, but their website was having technical difficulties. I tried calling them as well a number of times, and the same issue occurred. More technical difficulties. After repeated calls, I got a rep on the line to add minutes to my account and was told they'd reinstated my minutes dropped, since by now they had expired. It took another 3 calls to before they accurately credited my account. Once my minutes expire next year, I'll never use this company again. I highly recommend YOU DO NO USE T-MOILE!!!
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YOKAHUNDE
August 6, 2009
they would not help me
My sister bought me a phone in late 2008 it was a sidekick we were not going to have internet on it. But no one thought to mention to us that if the sidekick dosent have internet on it then every time the phone turned off it would delete everything I had saved. At first the phone actually had internet even though we had asked that the internet be taken out and i bought two songs and paid my sister for it and after two days i turned my phone off and when it turned back on it had deleted everything and when i called t-mobile to complain they explained to me that without internet it would keep doing that even though there was internet that month and we had to pay for it. so my only options were to either pay an extra $25 a month or make sure the phone dosent turn off . I decided to make sure the phone dosent turn off and that worked until about 7 months into it when the phone started to turn itself off and I kept loosing all my numbers and i called to complain about numerous times over a 6 month period but they wouldnt help me and from there it just kept getting worse i would get texts 3 days after they were sent if I had a missed call it wouldnt even show sometimes it even wouldnt ring. I finally got in touch with T-mobile and it seemed like they were willing to help and they asked me to send them my phone and i would get another one from them and i remember asking the guy if they were going to send me my phone back or another one and he insisted that it was going to be another one and when i asked how long it would take he said it would be 2-3 days after they recived the phone itself and i agreed to it and i sent him my phone the next day and they got it 5 days after I sent it and 5 days after they got it I still did not have my phone and when i called to check what was going on they claim that they had not recieved my phone but i had a tracking number and when i gave it to them and they checked it out themselves they agreed with what i had told them. but thats when they changed the story and told me that i would have to wait another 10 days just to figure out whats going on with my phone or to get it back and I wasnt going to get the new phone I was promised instead they were just going to fix what they thought was wrong with my phone and because it took so long for them to actually even help me my waranty is almost over and by the time i get the phone back it will be a few weeks left so if something else goes wrong again then that is going to be on me which I think is unfair because my sister has been with them for 5 years ive had my my line for 2 years our bills are always on time and they pretty much will collect our money but they wont do what is right there are all this rules protecting them well who is supposed to protect us from them?
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Jared
August 5, 2009
Terrible company
T-Mobile's service itself is fine. I have had nearly flawless service, with only a few dropped calls, and those are either while travelling in the middle of nowhere, or out in remote training locations. The customer service is fine so long as your problem is easily defined and fits into their standard procedures. However, if your problem is not standard, the weakness of the customer service section rapidly becomes apparent.
This all started about two months ago when I signed up for T-Mobile and before I came down on orders for Iraq. Unfortunately, T-Mobile botched the initial bank draft that I had set up to pay the bill. When I attempted to call them and fix the issue, T-Mobile's system literally hung up on me. It took them three weeks to acknowledge that I had been hung up on, and then was told, "We shut down from 10:00PM to 3:00AM." No apology, and after more than a month still no explanation for being hung up on 9:00AM.
This inability to admit fault should have been a strong indicator of the lack of professionalism that was to follow.
With access by phone inexplicably blocked, I decided to send an email to T-Mobile through its password protected My T-Mobile site. After providing the password, phone number, billing address, etc, the customer service section refused to do anything unless I verified my identity. Unfortunately, the information they wanted was my Social Security Number (SSN), and they wanted me to send it over an unsecure email.
Hold on a second here, the SSN that provided for a credit check somehow became the default password for my account? It somehow became the default password for the account without my knowledge or permission?
When I objected to using my SSN as a password, T-Mobile responded with, "When contacting customer care via e-mail you are required to provide your full billing name 10 digit mobile number and SSN ... We are unable to make any exceptions to this as this is an FCC mandated policy" (Alana L, T-Mobile CS Supervisor)
Unfortunately for T-Mobile, I was not unaware of actual FCC requirements about the safeguarding of information.
1. The FCC requirement involved is that a company take 'reasonable' steps to avoid pretexting, or having someone call up and pretend to be you so they can get your phone records.
2. The FCC actually has a specific admonishment to avoid using SSN as a password in any circumstance.
3. The FCC lists several approved methods for ID verification to avoid pretexting, and none of these approved methods involve the electronic or public transmission of sensitive information.
Please bear in mind that a phished email containing the 'required' information listed by Alana not only easily allows pretexting at will; it will also make stealing your ID extremely easy.
After almost a month of fruitlessly pointing this out, I finally reached George, the CS manager. His first response was, "Gee, I'd love to help you, but you haven't given us your SSN so I really have no idea if it is you or not." Please remember, this is the manager, the guy that sets the tone, and after a month this was the level of professionalism and maturity that any customer will face. In route to him, there were several CS Reps who were so rude and combative that I literally had to ask that they not be allowed to communicate with me ever again.
George's final response to my concerns before disappearing was, "Well, you'll just have to trust us then, as we have your best interests in mind."
Exposing yourself to ID theft just before deploying into a war zone is a good idea? Allowing a corporation to set sensitive information without a customers knowledge or permission as a public password is a good idea? Ignoring FCC approved ID verification methods in order to force me to use an unapproved method is somehow in my best interests?
After George disappeared, a complaint to the Better Business Bureau brought me in contact with Mrs. Masters for the Executive Customer Service Section. Mrs. Masters attempted to explain that verifying my ID was important, and even went so far as to acknowledge that sending information via an unencrypted email was a bad idea. Nevertheless, she wanted to me to go to a T-Mobile store with a valid photo ID, no problem so far, but would then have to whisper my SSN in order to prove I really was the person in the government issued photo ID.
After attempting to point out that the FCC explicitly states that photo ID is the sole means for ID verification in person, Mrs. Masters also simply shut down. Not only was their no explanation as to why my SSN had become my password without my permission or knowledge, but access to my password protected account was blocked, preventing me from even being able to pay my bills. That a password met the requirement for ID verification was ignored. T-Mobile refused repeated requests to restore my access until I gave them my SSN again (apparently by shouting it in public).
All the offers to verify my ID through several different FCC ID approved methods were ignored. The BBB unfortunately cannot bind anyone to agreement, and complaints to the FCC were literally ignored.
When I tried to have a military attorney explain the situation, T-Mobile literally imploded. The CS department completely shut down. As my normal billing method was now blocked, several inquiries about alternate methods were met with demands that I write their legal department by mail for a response. I literally had to call with a lawyer present before they would discuss alternate billing methods. Even when I secured an alternate method for payment, when I attempted to use that method I was met with yet another diatribe demanding that I give them my SSN. Only threats from a lawyer finally allowed me to pay my bill and prevent T-Mobile from using my credit rating as a weapon against me.
Again, the methods T-Mobile uses to verify ID are not supported by the FCC. There is a lack of regulatory understanding and enforcement, as well as a complete lack of understanding and acknowledgment about very real threats from phishing and other ID scams. Under these circumstances, can a customer refuse to use their SSN as a password? Wouldn't it seem reasonable to just use an alternate method that does not expose consumers to ID theft and is approved by the FCC? One would think so, but clearly not T-Mobile.
The only progress I have made in this endeavor is that the CS department no longer claims that sending SSN information is an FCC requirement. I just have to do it. A worse example of corporate incompetence and abuse I cannot find.
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