Verizon and Sprint customers take notice: the deadline to get a piece of the $158 million 'cramming' settlement is almost here. Customers have until Dec. 31 to submit claims for a refund for the ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Verizon Wireless will pay $90 million and Sprint $68 million to settle charges that the mobile giants allowed phony charges on their customers’ monthly bills so they could keep a cut ...
Sprint isn’t satisfied with Verizon’s ballsy claims. Photo: Sprint The war between mobile carriers in the U.S. continues to heat up and with the latest battle, it’s personal. Sprint came out with a ...
Verizon’s $20 billion Frontier deal won FCC approval in May 2025 after it pledged to drop DEI policies under pressure from ...
Virginia consumers have until tonight to claim refunds from a $158 million federal settlement with Sprint and Verizon over unauthorized charges placed on wireless phone bills. Those who believe ...
Phone carriers play this competitive game of “me too.” So following the AT&T promo that will double data on shared plans, both Sprint and Verizon have announced that they’ll do the same. The Sprint ...
I would hate to think I would be a Verizon customer. Lots of things that sprint does that verizon dont ..and I wouldnt see verizon changing anything. Worst would be to let verizon get their hands on ...
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Verizon Earnings Beat, Revenue Misses. New CEO Promises Big Changes.
Verizon CommunicationsVZ on Wednesday reported third-quarter adjusted earnings that topped Wall Street targets while revenue ...
Wireless carriers Verizon Wireless and Sprint are both offering the new Research In Motion's BlackBerry 8830 CDMA/GSM phone to their customers, with Verizon Wireless the first to have the global ...
So maybe the Verizon bid for Sprint isn’t actually happening after all—or it’s happening without Vodafone’s approval. The UK mobile carrier stated that they hadn’t been talking to Verizon about the ...
Remember Verizon’s “can you hear me now” guy? That’s right, he was the one in the carrier’s TV ads that went around the country testing the network’s signal, repeatedly asking, “Can you hear me now?” ...
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