
Trump Mobile, the wireless carrier and smartphone brand tied to US President Donald Trump, is reportedly exposing sensitive customer information through an easily exploitable flaw on its website.
That is according to claims made by YouTubers Coffeezilla and penguinz0, both of whom said they were affected after ordering the company’s delayed T1 smartphone.
In separate videos, the creators said a researcher contacted them after discovering that Trump Mobile customer records could be accessed online, exposing personal data, including:
- Full names
- Mailing addresses
- Email addresses
- Order details
The researcher allegedly withheld technical specifics publicly because the vulnerability remained active at the time of disclosure.
Coffeezilla, whose real name is Stephen Findeisen and who is widely known for investigations into cryptocurrency scams and online fraud, said he personally verified the issue after the researcher provided portions of his own account data as proof. “Everything short of a credit card number is being leaked,” Coffeezilla stated in his video, adding that the flaw was “not complicated” to exploit.

Coffeezilla
Penguinz0, the online alias of creator Charles White Jr., corroborated the claims and said the researcher appeared focused on responsible disclosure rather than exploitation. According to both creators, attempts to notify Trump Mobile privately were unsuccessful, with repeated outreach efforts allegedly receiving no response.
Trump Mobile launched last year as a branded mobile carrier and smartphone initiative marketed around “American-made” messaging and conservative branding. The company’s flagship T1 smartphone, a gold-colored Android device, was initially advertised as being manufactured in the United States. However, subsequent reporting and reviews suggested the device may instead be a modified or rebranded handset sourced overseas.
The project has also faced criticism over repeated shipping delays, shifting marketing language, and questions surrounding preorder numbers. Both YouTubers said the exposed database records indicated significantly lower customer interest than previously reported. According to Coffeezilla, internal order identifiers suggested roughly 30,000 total orders associated with around 10,000 unique customers, far below earlier public estimates claiming nearly 600,000 reservations.
Neither creator independently verified the authenticity of historical preorder figures, and Trump Mobile has not publicly commented on the discrepancy.
At the time of publication, Trump Mobile had not issued a public statement addressing the alleged data exposure or confirming whether the vulnerability had been fixed.







Leave a Reply