Trends
Trump criticises AT&T for conference call glitch
What happened: Trump calls on AT&T to fix issues after large-scale virtual event Former President Trump posted on Truth Social that AT&T “blew” a big conference call with faith leaders. He said the call had 8,000 to 10,000 participants and started about 20 minutes late. Trump said this was the secon…

Headline
What happened: Trump calls on AT&T to fix issues after large-scale virtual event Former President Trump posted on Truth Social that AT&T “blew” a big conference call with faith leaders. He said the call had 8,000 to 10,000 participants and started about 20 minutes late. Trump…
Context
Former President Trump posted on Truth Social that AT&T “blew” a big conference call with faith leaders. He said the call had 8,000 to 10,000 participants and started about 20 minutes late. Trump said this was the second time AT&T failed on a high-profile event and said the company needed to improve or he might switch providers. AT&T reached out to the White House to investigate. The company said its initial checks showed its network worked fine. AT&T said the problem came from the third-party platform used for the call. AT&T added it was reviewing how to prevent such delays going forward.
Evidence
Pending intelligence enrichment.
Analysis
Also read: AT&T’s ORAN shift: A game-changer for telecom giants Also read: AT&T unveils customer service guarantee to lead industry This incident highlights how telecom providers can face high-profile scrutiny when service glitches occur. Public trust in AT&T could be affected if major events run poorly. Users might worry about call quality during critical virtual meetings. AT&T’s response places responsibility on the platform provider. This may push telcos to monitor software partners more closely. In future, carriers and platforms may strengthen testing for high-attendance virtual events. The episode shows how telecom and conferencing sectors must work better together.
Key Points
- Trump blames AT&T after delay in faith leaders call
- AT&T says fault lay with platform provider
Actions
Pending intelligence enrichment.





