One T-Mobile subscriber’s T Life app attempted to send him over 54,000 ads in 24 hours
“The T Life app is straight up trash….this app is just meant to push a bunch of bullshit onto the customers. T-Mobile is in full vampiric revenue mode right now trying to pinch pennies and suck blood out of turnips everywhere they can.”-Reddit user Tree_of_Woes
One Reddit user said that the number of ads is so high because when the ads, metrics, and analytics APIs are blocked by AdGuard and can’t reach their destinations, requests continue to be sent out like a brute force attack. The problem is that the constant attempts to block ads and trackers that follow the user around the internet could drain the battery on a T Life user’s phone and tie up some of the device’s resources.
But also, apps: don’t be shitty. Few of us care about your perceived value in hidden metrics, instrumentation, and ads that use our data and our battery power.
T-Mobile specifically, you’re a paid service, you should be doing zero of this.”-Reddit user ChainsawBologna
It appears from the shared image that Airship (formerly Urban Airship) is the company behind the 187 tracker requests that the T Life had blocked. Airship is a mobile engagement company that uses push notifications, in-app messaging, email, and SMS to send personalized and targeted messages that attempt to reach customers on their mobile devices.