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AT&T customers past and present impacted by huge data leak

An at&t office building.
Joshua Brown / Pexels

AT&T has changed the account passcodes of millions of its customers after it confirmed a massive data breach that saw personal data leaked on the dark web.

AT&T said in a message on its website on Saturday that it was reaching out to 7.6 million current customers and 65.4 million former customers whose personal information had been compromised in a data leak involving “sensitive personal information” such as names, phone numbers, addresses, birth dates, AT&T account numbers and passcodes, and Social Security numbers.

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It added that the compromised data “appears to be from 2019 or earlier and does not contain personal financial information or call history” and encouraged customers to “remain vigilant by monitoring account activity and credit reports.”

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The company said that customers past and present whose information was involved in the leak will receive an email or letter explaining the incident, what information was compromised, and what AT&T is doing in response.

If you have an active account impacted by the security breach, AT&T will have already reset your passcode. In a precautionary measure, the company is strongly advising the rest of its customers to change their AT&T passcode if they haven’t done so in the last year.

Here’s how to do it:
1. Go to your myAT&T Profile. Sign in if asked (if you have extra security enabled and can’t sign in, select Get a new passcode).
2. Scroll to My linked accounts.
3. Select Edit for the passcode you want to update.
4. Follow the prompts to finish.
Note: Refrain from using character combinations from previous passcodes.

To assist customers, AT&T said it is offering impacted individuals complimentary identity theft and credit monitoring services.

Check out AT&T’s website for more information on the data breach.

AT&T isn’t the only major mobile carrier to be impacted by such incidents. T-Mobile, for example, was hit last year in a breach affecting 37 million of its customers, which saw customer names, billing addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, birth dates, and account numbers stolen.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
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