The issue of whether AT&T is overcharging the roughly 20 million Americans with iPhones and iPads for their data use has been brought back into the spotlight by an MSNBC investigation.
According to the MSNBC investigation, lawyer spent $80,000 and several months testing the data used by iPhones and iPads on both the AT&T and Verizon Wireless networks. The attorneys found that AT&T “systematically overstated data usage by 7 to 14 percent – sometimes as much as 300 percent.”
“Did you find overcharges on every single transaction?” MSNBC’s Lisa Meyers asks a representative of the firm investigating the matter in footage of the report.
“Yes, every single one,” he answers.
“Did you ever find an instance where the discrepancy worked to the benefit of the customer?” Meyers responds.
“Never,” the representative answers. “Always an overcharge, never an undercharge.”
Meyers goes on to explain that an independent engineer asked to look into the matter bought a new iPhone, disabled everything that might trigger data usage and let it sit idle for 10 days.
“When the bill came in, there were charges for 35 different transactions,” said Meyers.
AT&T’s response is that applications may automatically update or refresh in the background, using data the consumer is not aware of. In instances where a bill shows data usage and charges – “phantom charges,” as they’ve been dubbed – during the night, when the owner was in all likelihood asleep, AT&T argues that its network is only then tallying data use from during the day.
In a response sent to the Boy Genius Report, AT&T replied, in part:
In January, AT&T was the subject of a federal class-action lawsuit that similarly accused it of “systematically overstating the amount of data used on each data transaction involving an iPhone or iPad,” and appears to be the basis for the MSNBC report.
It was filed by Patrick Hendricks, who stated in his claim, according to a report from the Courthouse News Service, “This is like the rigged gas pump charging you when you never even pulled your car into the station.”
An AT&T spokesperson, responding to the lawsuit at the time, said AT&T intended to “defend [itself] vigorously.”
During the first quarter, AT&T added 2 million new wireless subscribers, sold 5.5 million smartphones and reported overall profit of $3.4 billion on revenues of $31.2 billion.