million for "cramming."
Cramming is when a carrier adds unauthorized third-party charges to a mobile phone bill. These charges are usually for subscriptions and premium text-messaging services - ringtones, horoscopes, gossip, etc. - that the customer didn't ask for or realize they were signing up for. T-Mobile got in trouble a few months ago for the same thing.
As a part of the settlement, AT&T will pay $25 million in penalties to the state and Federal Communications Commission. The other $80 million, however, goes to the FTC to reimburse AT&T customers.
To be eligible, you need to be a current or former AT&T customer who was charged for third-party services - without authorization - after January 1, 2009.
Putting a stop to cramming is just one way to lower your monthly cellular bill. Here are three more ways to save big.
If you've decided to switch up your mobile data plan, learn some mistakes to avoid so you can pick the one with the best balance of data and cost.
Do you have trouble making your family's data plan last all month before running out and risking overage charges? Click here to find out the unexpected things that devour your data you can put a stop to it.
Lastly, I did a little back of the napkin calculations with this $105 million fine. In its last quarterly report, AT&T reported revenues of about$32 billion over three months this spring. At that rate, AT&T takes in $105 million in about 2 hours and 20 minutes of an 8-hour work day,