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AT&T will give affected customers $5 each to compensate for the Feb. 22 cellphone network outage that left many without service for hours. Tens of thousands of customers across the
country will get the $5 credit on their account within two billing cycles, the company said Sunday on its website. The credit does not apply to AT&T Business, prepaid service or Cricket,
its low-cost wireless service. Prepaid customers will have options available to them if they were affected although AT&T did not elaborate on what those options might be. The outage
knocked out cellphone service for thousands of its users across the U.S. starting early in the day before it was restored. Without elaborating, AT&T blamed the incident on an error in
coding. “Based on our initial review, we believe that today’s outage was caused by the application and execution of an incorrect process used as we were expanding our network, not a
cyberattack,” the company said later in the day Thursday as service was restored. Federal Communications Commission and FBI spokesmen both said their agencies had contacted AT&T about
the outage. AT&T had nearly 75,000 outages Thursday morning in locations including Dallas, Houston and San Antonio in Texas and also Atlanta, Chicago, Miami and New York City, according
to data from Downdetector. The outages began at about 3:30 a.m. ET. The Dallas-based carrier has more than 240 million subscribers, making it the country’s largest. Cricket Wireless, a
mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) that AT&T owns, reported more than 13,000 outages, according to the outage tracking website. WHAT YOU CAN DO DURING ANY CELL SERVICE OUTAGE For
cellphone users who don’t have landlines as a backup, the best way to maintain mobile service is to connect your smartphone to your home Wi-Fi or a guest Wi-Fi network if you’re on the go.
Some iPhone users saw SOS messages displayed in the status bar on their cellphones. The message indicates that the device is having trouble connecting to their cellular provider’s network,
but it can make emergency calls through other carrier networks, according to Apple Support. “We encourage the use of Wi-Fi calling until service is restored,” AT&T said Thursday.