Skip to main content

AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, and Google have waived fees to France

iphone emergency call
guteksk7/Shutterstock
There’s nothing worse than not knowing the status of a loved one after a tragedy. Thankfully, mobile phone carriers seem to understand that a little humanity goes a long way. Following the horrific Bastille Day terrorist attack that left more than 80 people dead and scores injured in Nice, France, providers including Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, and Google have temporarily waived calling and texting fees for subscribers in and around the region.

Verizon, for its part, is offering free wireless and wireline calling from the U.S. to France until July 16. AT&T is providing both its postpaid and prepaid customers free landline, texting, and mobile calls until a day later, July 17, and offering all subscribers the ability to donate $10 to the Foundation for France by texting “NICE” to 20222. T-Mobile is making it free for subscribers to MetroPCS, GoSmartMobile, and Walmart plan customers to “contact loved ones in the [Nice] area” until July 17. And Sprint, through July 17, is crediting all fees for calls placed and texts sent to France by Sprint, Boost, and Virgin Mobile customers.

Google, too, has joined the outpouring of support by making calls to France from Hangouts, Google Voice, and its Project Fi mobile service free “from anywhere in the world.” In addition, it has launched a card in Google Now, the search firm’s virtual assistant on Android and iOS, with “updates from French authorities.”

It’s the continuation of an inspiring trend. In April, following a devastating earthquake off the coast of Esmeraldas, Ecuador, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, AT&T, and Google began offering U.S. customers free calls and texts to the country. Those carriers, too, offered free service to residents and relatives affected by this year’s earthquakes in Japan.

The carrier announcements follow Facebook’s activation of Safety Check, the network’s tool for finding missing persons in the aftermath of disasters. It determines a user’s location both by information they’ve listed in their profile and by their last known geographic location and, if applicable, prompts them to let friends know that they’re safe.

Facebook said it has activated four times in the past five weeks alone, notably in June following the mass shooting at an Orlando night club and after the June 28 terror attack on Turkey’s largest international airport. “Last month, we began testing features that allow people to both initiate and share Safety Check on Facebook,” a representative for Facebook said in a statement. “We hope the people in the area find the tool a helpful way to let their friends an family know they are OK.”

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
T-Mobile delays shutdown of Sprint 3G CDMA network
The T-Mobile logo on a smartphone.

Folks using Sprint’s legacy 3G CDMA network may have just won a slight reprieve, with a new report revealing that T-Mobile has pushed back the date of its shutdown by another two months. T-Mobile, which merged with Sprint in 2020, had planned to decommission the aging 3G network on March 31, 2022. However, The T-Mo Report has discovered that the carrier has quietly extended the deadline to May 31, 2022, instead.

The change initially came to light via a post on Reddit, where someone noticed the new date on the website of Softbank, which previously owned Sprint. Although T-Mobile hasn’t made a public announcement, The T-Mo Report confirmed that several Sprint customers with older phones received an email directly from the carrier. Those with phones that can’t use LTE were told that they now have until May 31, 2022, before the Sprint CDMA network shuts down. However, even this date may not be final. A footnote on the Softbank page adds that “there is a possibility that the date of May 31 will be rescheduled in [the] future.”
Sunsetting legacy 3G services
T-Mobile initially wanted to shut down the Sprint 3G network on January 1, 2022, but delayed it to March 31, when its partner, Dish, raised concerns that it didn’t have enough time to migrate its legacy customers over to the Boost Mobile network. When Sprint merged with T-Mobile in 2020, it was required to divest itself of its prepaid services, Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile, which were sold off to Dish to ensure the industry remained competitive. Regulators hoped that Dish could rise from the ashes of Sprint to take over the vacated fourth-place spot on the top carriers list.

Read more
T-Mobile lures subscribers with 500GB of Google One cloud storage for $5 a month
T-Mobile smartphone.

Starting October 12, T-Mobile and Sprint customers are eligible for a new and exclusive plan that will allow them to pay $5 a month for 500GB of Google One cloud storage.

The plan, announced Monday morning, allows for cloud backups of photos, videos, and contacts; extra storage for services such as Google Drive and Gmail; file storage and access from any compatible device; and the ability to share the extra storage with up to five additional people, who don't all necessarily have to be on the same T-Mobile account.

Read more
T-Mobile partners to promote Google apps for messaging, cloud storage, and TV
Google Pixel 5

T-Mobile is going all-in on Google apps and services. The two companies have announced a massive partnership that will see T-Mobile officially support Android Messages (with RCS, or Rich Communication Services) on all of its Android phones, and promote a range of Google's apps and services in place of its own.

A few different Google apps and services will get pushed by T-Mobile as part of the deal. For example, Google One will be pushed as T-Mobile's "preferred phone backup and cloud solution," and YouTube TV will be promoted as T-Mobile's premium live TV solution.

Read more