You might have been a little too hard on T-Mobile or maybe it’s the reason some changes have been walked back،
According to the media, only 1 percent of T Mobile customers will be affected by the change. This implies that only certain customers of the affected plans (Magenta, One, Magenta 55+, Simple Choice / Select Choice and Simple Choice Business) will be moved to newer plans. This is a relief, as previous reports suggested that all customers on old plans would be moved to new plans.
According to an internal document consulted by The mobile reportcustomers will be notified before any changes are made.
Although it’s certainly reassuring to hear that T Mobile will be communicated about the changes and it intends to move only a few customers to new packages, given the series of controversial changes that the carrier has introduced in recent times, it is difficult not to be skeptical about each of its movements.
In this case, the internal document that first leaked T MobileThe plan to migrate customers to new plans, which for some customers would have cost $120 more than their existing deal, meant all customers would be moved and has now been removed from internal systems. That’s not very confidence-inspiring now, is it?
![A previously leaked document implied that all customers on older plans would be moved to more expensive plans. Maybe you were a little too hard on T-Mobile or maybe that's why some changes were rolled back.](https://wikidollar.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/1697603836_693_You-might-have-been-a-little-too-hard-on-T-Mobile.jpg)
A previously leaked document implied that all customers on older plans would be moved to more expensive plans.
And then the question arises: what is the guarantee that T Mobile Won’t it make adverse changes to other plans or force Sprint customers to upgrade to more expensive plans?
After all, even if a small number of customers are migrated to new plans, the fact that it’s an opt-out change rather than an opt-in change suggests the company could end up profiting from those who don’t read all emails. and the texts they receive carefully.
Regardless, no changes have been made so far and are expected to happen next month. It’s unclear how long customers will have to return to their old plans once they upgrade to a new one.