Top Comments
All Comments (46)
-
Scary tmobile noooooooo
-
No i want the merger to go through
-
i just gotta lol
-
@gumby2440 its not that they dont want us anymore...its because t-mobile is doing horrible in the cell phone industry. They would need to merge if they didnt want to go bankrupt.
-
So, a bunch of T-Mobile costumers out there don't seem to get it. T-Mobile WANTS to be bought out by AT&T. You nay not want them to be bought out, but they do. Make Sense? To sum it up, T-Mobile doesn't want you anymore. I'm not even going to sugar coat it. Talk about lack of innovation! T-Mobile doesn't even want to be in the U.S. business anymore, if they were left alone, they would not continue to innovate. If the deal want through, at least it means better service on both sides.
-
This is sooo stupidly funny... the face the tmo girl makes the first time she says "oooh"..... priceless
-
An AT&T legal staffer inadvertently (and briefly) posted a damning internal document to the FCC's docket for the pending AT&T/T-Mobile merger. The document makes it clear that "AT&T is giving Deutsche Telekom $39 billion primarily to reduce market competition" and that the company's claims of bigger network buildouts and increased employment are utterly fictional.
-
relatedly: tinyurl (dot) com (slash) Leaked-ATT-Letter
-
at&t said that tmobile subsribers will keep their plans until the upgrade a second time
@TMoFanatic
"and they won't then"
Why... because they promised not to?
I assure you the second AT&T has an opportunity to raise my rate they will. I've been a T-Mobile customer for almost 10 years now and i've never had a problem with their service or their pricing. This is the opposite of all my friends on AT&T and other carriers.
The only thing this merger offers me is less choice and worse service... anyone who thinks otherwise is being naieve.
pingzdotcom 7 months ago 35
@giantcandy Just because they said that now doesn't mean that will be what happens when the deal goes through. If they suddenly decide to honor that deal great, but it's naive to imply that a corporation would never go back on its word. History is full of examples of them doing just that.
IBelieveinDayDreams 7 months ago 14