Tech

FCC not Penalizing T-Mobile for outage that Ajit Pai Known as”Improper”

A T-Mobile advertisement that says,

Expand / T-Mobile ad in New York City’s Times Square on October 15, 2020. (credit: Getty Images

Meanwhile, the Federal Communications Commission has completed investigating T-Mobile to get a system outage that Chairman Ajit Pai known as”unacceptable.” But rather than punishing the cell provider, the FCC is only issuing a public opinion to”remind” cellphone businesses of”industry-accepted best practices” that might have averted the T-Mobile outage.

Following the 12-hour nationally Valve on June 15 interrupted calling and texting services, such as 911 emergency calls, Pai composed which”The T-Mobile network support is improper” and”that the FCC is launching an investigation. We are requiring answers–and thus are American customers.”

Pai includes a history of speaking hard with carriers rather than adhering to punishments that may get a better deterrence impact than sternly worded warnings. This seems to be exactly what happened again {} the FCC declared the findings in the research to T-Mobile. Pai reported that”T-Mobile’s outage had been a loser” because the company did not follow best practices which might have averted or minimized it{} he declared no punishment.  The thing seems to be shut according to yesterday’s statement, however we contacted Chairman Pai’s office now to inquire whether any penalty of T-Mobile is coming. We are going to update this article when we receive a response.

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