- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
Verizon initially failed to remove a flawed update file that caused two outages.
Oh, how nice that they agreed to the fine. Wouldn’t want to punish a company without its approval.
Right? Hit’em with a fine they can’t agree with. Make the bastards sit back in their fancy corner office chairs.
That’s comparable to about a $12.75 fine for someone with a $60k net income.
This sort of disclaimer needs to be beside every article concerning corporate fines. Fucking ridiculous.
It was a one time event. Granted losing access to emergency services is very bad but they did come forward and admit wrong doing. If this happens a second time they can jump the fine way up.
Also you should look at the fine for a first offense parking violation
But it’s not the first time. A couple examples:
https://www.theverge.com/2021/12/19/22845283/fcc-verizon-att-mobile-carriers-911-calls https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/01/fcc-blasts-verizon-for-911-outages-during-summer-2012-storm/
My highest upvoted comment on reddit was actually in a thread joking about fees to recoup the fine, suggesting they’d call it a “911 Memorial Fee”.
Ok, I didn’t know that. Yeah they need to get in some more trouble and the regulators should ask way more questions. In the worse case it shouldn’t be uncalled for to revoke there license to operate as a mobile carrier
Thank you for your service: this kind of calculation is always an excellent addition to posts like this.
Literally 10% of my verizon bill
a slap on the wrist
That’s the idea
Cost of doing business, baby