The latest stumble in a very long saga
The newest twist comes from a content creator with 1.55 million subscribers, who says in a new video that the Trump Mobile site exposed customer data through a basic security exploit. He claims he was one of the affected customers, with his mailing address, email and order details left accessible, though not his payment information.

Video by voidzilla
He calls the flaw “very low-hanging fruit” and says he held back the technical details on purpose so the problem would not get worse. A second creator reportedly confirmed the exploit was real and that his own exposed data checked out, which is the only outside corroboration we have so far.
Treat this as a reported claim and not a confirmed breach. Trump Mobile has stayed quiet, and the creator says earlier private warnings to the company went unanswered.
The number nobody at Trump Mobile wanted out
Here is where the saga gets even crazier: the exposed customer IDs reportedly point to roughly 10,000 customers and around 30,000 orders.
That sits a very long way from the 600,000 orders the company kept waving around as proof of demand. We previously covered how those preorders supposedly pulled in $59 million, and that headline figure looks a lot thinner if the real order count is a small fraction of it.
A greatest-hits reel of T1 mishaps
This fits the pattern so neatly it is almost impressive. We called out the warning signs on this thing from the very start, back when it looked like a rebranded HTC handset with a gold paint job and a shrinking spec sheet.Then came the vanishing “Made in USA” wording, the missed launch windows and a device that collected $100 deposits for months while existing mostly as a render. A leaky checkout page is just the newest entry on a very crowded list of misses.
Where I land on it
I honestly thought shipping the phone would be the part Trump Mobile finally nailed, and for about a day it looked that way. Then the shine wore off in record time, which at this point is the most on-brand thing the T1 could possibly do.
To be fair, this is still one creator’s claim and not a confirmed breach, so I am not going to pretend the sky is falling. If it does hold up, though, “we never answered the warning emails” is a rough look for a carrier whose whole pitch is asking you to trust it with your information.
If you bought in, keep an eye out for phishing, and we will update this story the moment Trump Mobile says anything at all.

