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T-Mobile UK Employees Sold Customers' Information 65

angry tapir writes "Workers at T-Mobile UK have been selling customer data to brokers who worked for the competition, according to T-Mobile and the UK's Information Commissioner's Office. Criminal charges are being prepared. 'Many thousands' of customers' account details, millions of records, were sold to several brokers for substantial amounts of money, the ICO said. In an announcement (PDF) from the ICO, the agency does not name the operator involved, but T-Mobile acknowledged that it had alerted ICO about the data breach. The BBC reports that after the other mobile operators said they were not the subject of the investigation, T-Mobile confirmed its involvement."
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T-Mobile UK Employees Sold Customers' Information

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  • by MorderVonAllem ( 931645 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @08:53PM (#30138008)
    At what point do the competitors have to take responsibility for purchasing the data? It seems that they should have known the data wasn't kosher.
  • No surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @08:53PM (#30138016) Journal

    The likelihood of valuable data being exploited is proportional to it's marketability. The more important the data, the more likely it will be stolen or otherwise exploited. It doesn't matter if it's a company, a utility or a government.

  • by Scannerman ( 1136265 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @09:18PM (#30138182)

    The entire UK (Is it any different elsewhere?) Mobile Phone industry works on ethical standard that would shame organised crime, among the many abuses I've come across :

    * Deceptive tariffs, resulting in unexpectedly large bills, especially the roaming data ( I used to handle the phone admin for a medium sized company, we had a user come back from overseas trips with bills up over a thousand pounds when the free roaming data the salesman told us we'd bought turned out to have a fair use limit of 10MB...)

    * The reverse billing text message scam - some of the companies operating this make tens of millions, and have been fined hundreds of thousands for repeated abuses - they are still in business.

    * your bank details get passed on and you are billed for insurance you never asked for

    * BUYING the stolen data

    Think of these guys as a bit like Chris in the Sopranos, They got impatient and wanted a piece of the action for themselves. They may get a slap on the wrist, but the business is full of worse criminals.

  • by oPless ( 63249 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @09:22PM (#30138220) Journal

    Can somebody say "Data protection act" ?

  • by CountBrass ( 590228 ) on Wednesday November 18, 2009 @02:07PM (#30146442)
    I have my 'phone with 02 and I've been getting these cold calls as well.

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