TMobile seems to be particularly bad right now, but Verizon and AT&T aren’t necessarily good.
The weak link is usually retail or channel. TMobile is in a high growth phase, so I’d hazard to guess they are more disorganized. Switching to Verizon may reduce exposure, but they have their own similar issues - an aggressively dumb carrier employee is capable of almost anything.
I think the issue is that phone companies weren’t prepared for their services to be used for such high security tasks. For many decades, your phone was just mostly for keeping up with friends and family. 2FA wasn’t even that popular until maybe in the last 10 years.
Just like how the locks we buy for our exterior doors are really weak but that’s currently fine for the status quo. You’re not going to preemptively spend money to upgrade your locks.
Yep, using SMS for 2FA is the same as colleges using your social security number as ID on everything back in the day. It absolutely was never intended for the use case.
As sad as it is to write this, Apple corporate lines are Verizon - though they also have ATT available if you need it or have a preference. I only say this as I don’t know of any major corporation who picks TMO as their company lines.
All this to say, I trust ATT and Verizon slightly more than T-Mobile
Also consider that T-Mobile as it exists is the result of years/decades of mergers and acquisitions so they have decades of legacy and non-conforming systems. This situation is bound to cause security issues as well. I had a family member work for an MVNO that interfaced with them and this is what she saw.
>"Also consider that T-Mobile as it exists is the result of years/decades of mergers and acquisitions so they have decades of legacy and non-conforming systems."
This is true of just about every single mobile carrier today. In fact this is true of all telecom companies for most of their history from mobile carriers, to cable companies to ISPs. The entire telecom industry is an unending series of consolidation and acquisition of assets. This is already 12 years out of date but this should give you an idea:
The weak link is usually retail or channel. TMobile is in a high growth phase, so I’d hazard to guess they are more disorganized. Switching to Verizon may reduce exposure, but they have their own similar issues - an aggressively dumb carrier employee is capable of almost anything.