 (Source: Tech Magazine News)
 T-Mobile shows its customers "some boobs". See the bottom right side of the page. (Source: Consumerist)
Login to your T-Mobile page and you may be in for a surprise
The over 33.5 million customers at
the nation's
fourth largest mobile carrier, T-Mobile, may be in for a bit of a
surprise. When completing the monthly ritual of logging in to
the T-Mobile website to pay his bill, one customer reportedly came
across a controversial
sight -- topless ladies.
The customer, whose name is
Andrew, wrote to The Consumerist:
I have my cell phone service with T-Mobile. This past
weekend, I received a e-mail from them saying that my new bill was
ready to be viewed and paid for. Being the expeditious person that I
am, I logged in to T-Mobile's website, whipped out my trusty credit
card, and paid my bill online that same day. In doing so, I made a
mental note to print out a copy of the bill for my records on Monday
morning when I got to work (where I have a printer access). A little
on the anal-retentive side I'd agree with you, but whatever.
Anyways, I logged into the T-Mobile website this
morning to do all of this, and attached to this e-mail is a screen
shot of my profile page after I finished logging in. Notice anything
odd at the bottom of the page, perhaps in the right hand side of the
screen, where it says "Connect with MobileLife"? ;)
I assure you that I don't upload pictures of topless
women to my T-Mobile account, and that those pictures weren't from my
camera phone (which I don't use, and even if I did, look at what type
of phone I have! That crappy Razr couldn't take anywhere near that
sort of clarity that those shots provide.)
As more
similar reports piled in it became clear that the "accidental
porn" was anything but the "not common" isolated
incident T-Mobile suggested it to be. One customer, a head of
the Human Resources Department, relates a story in which a coworker
logged in to his T-Mobile account to resolve an issue with his phone
at work and saw a similar topless picture. He states, "No
one – and I mean NO ONE - would believe me when I told them that I
did not take the photo, nor did I put it there. I finally had to just
drop it because the more I insisted that it wasn't mine, the more
guilty I sounded."
Another customer says that the
T-Mobile's comes-with-porn created a bit of a sticky situation with
his spouse. He states, "I was actually sitting at the
computer with my wife, looking at my bill and trying to add ring-back
tones, and all of a sudden, there was a picture of some girls butt
with a caption reading 'kiss this'. WTF!!?!?? She FLIPPED! To this
day, she STILL talks about it!"
While T-Mobile surely
wishes this issue would just disappear, it now appears that the
pornographic pictures are more widespread than previously thought and
not just confined to "boobs" -- indeed various responders
have sent T-Mobile screenshots showing all sorts of anatomy, leaving
little untouched.
What's still unclear is exactly how and why
T-Mobile is showing these pornographic
pictures on its site. T-Mobile hasn't offered an official
response yet, other than to say, "T-Mobile is looking into it
and investigating the situation."
Updated 11/5/2009
T-Mobile just sent us over this statement regarding the matter:
T-Mobile is aware of reports from a few customers who have seen inappropriate or unwanted pictures in their online "MyAlbum" section within their MyT-Mobile account. We are taking these reports seriously and actively investigating these issues.
Our initial analysis of the reports leads us to believe that pictures were likely sent to some customers' mobile number by a third party, whether the customers knew the sender or not. If a customer has not had picture messaging enabled on their handset, a picture sent to them may be delivered only to their online MyAlbum account. For this reason, some customers are surprised when they see the picture for the first time in their MyT-Mobile account.
We will continue to investigate the reports but if customers would like to avoid receiving picture messages in the future they can explore using T-Mobile’s Message Blocking features which are accessed through their MyT-Mobile account online.
"So, I think the same thing of the music industry. They can't say that they're losing money, you know what I'm saying. They just probably don't have the same surplus that they had." -- Wu-Tang Clan founder RZA
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