Judge Reportedly Approves AT&T’s $177M Data Breach Settlement, But Retail Stays Cautious

A Reuters report said the agreement was deemed fair and reasonable by U.S. District Judge Ada Brown during a hearing on Friday in Dallas federal court, where the class-action lawsuit was being litigated.
 In this photo illustration, the logo of AT&T Inc. is displayed on a smartphone screen.
In this photo illustration, the logo of AT&T Inc. is displayed on a smartphone screen. (Photo illustration by Cheng Xin/Getty Images)
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Shivani Kumaresan·Stocktwits
Updated Mar 05, 2026   |   2:29 PM EST
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Telecommunications firm AT&T Inc.(T) has reached a $177 million preliminary settlement to put to rest a series of lawsuits stemming from data breaches that compromised the personal information of millions of its customers across the United States.

A Reuters report said the agreement was deemed fair and reasonable by U.S. District Judge Ada Brown during a hearing on Friday in Dallas federal court, where the class-action lawsuit was being litigated. 

Depending on the specific breach and impact, affected customers may receive up to $2,500 or $5,000 for documented losses directly connected to the incidents. 

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One of the incidents led to unauthorized downloads of approximately 109 million accounts, including call and text log data from 2022. This information was reportedly extracted from AT&T’s cloud system managed via Snowflake Inc. (SNOW). 

The breach impacted a six-month timeframe, compromising nearly the entire customer base.

In March 2024, AT&T announced that it was investigating a data set discovered on the dark web. Initial findings indicated the data included information on 7.6 million current and over 65 million past customers. 

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The compromised data appeared to predate 2020, likely originating from 2019 or earlier. The Federal Communications Commission is conducting a separate inquiry.

In November 2024, a TechCrunch report revealed that the Department of Justice formally charged the two hackers, referring to their victim as a primary U.S. telecom provider. 

These details closely match disclosures AT&T made about compromised metadata from customer communications.

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Authorities allege that the two carried out a year-long extortion campaign, demanding roughly $2.5 million in Bitcoin from several affected firms. 

They reportedly infiltrated AT&T’s cloud systems in November 2023, along with data from other Snowflake clients.

As digital threats grow more complex and frequent, class-action litigation is becoming a key mechanism for holding companies accountable and compensating affected individuals. 

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On Stocktwits, retail sentiment around AT&T remained in ‘bearish’ territory.

T's Sentiment Meter and Message Volume as of 2.00 p.m. ET on Jun.20, 2025 | Source: Stocktwits
T's Sentiment Meter and Message Volume as of 2.00 p.m. ET on Jun.20, 2025 | Source: Stocktwits

AT&T stock has gained over 22% in 2025 and 54% in the last 12 months.

Also See: Meta And Oakley’s AI-Enhanced Smart Glasses For Athletes Draws Retail Cheer

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For updates and corrections, email newsroom[at]stocktwits[dot]com.

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