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Q Link Wireless was an American telecommunications company based in Dania, Florida that provided free wireless services to Lifeline eligible consumers. The company also offered prepaid mobile phone services including wireless voice, messaging, and data services under the Hello Mobile brand.
Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) in the United States lease wireless telephone and data service from the four major cellular carriers in the country—AT&T Mobility, Boost Mobile, T-Mobile US, and Verizon—and offer various levels of free and/or paid talk, text and data services to their customers.
Some of these used a peer-to-peer protocol (e.g. talk, ntalk and ytalk), while others required peers to connect to a server (see talker and IRC). The Zephyr Notification Service (still in use at some institutions) was invented at MIT's Project Athena in the 1980s to allow service providers to locate and send messages to users.
Five more people have been charged by the SEC in the MJ Capital Funding fraud. ... Issa Asad, CEO of Q Link Wireless LLC, and the Dania Beach-based company pleaded guilty in Miami federal court to ...
Among the providers mentioned as offering free tablets are Q Link Wireless, Standup Wireless and Easy Wireless. ... 7 Money Secrets All Wealthy People Know -- And How You Can Use Them, Too.
Looking here (2019) and checking Industry -> Telecommunications, Q Link doesn't even show up. Doing the same for 2018, Q Link shows up as 13th place. I don't think that is notable enough to be included here. I'll remove the sentence for now, if anyone objects then we can discuss here. An3223 06:36, 19 June 2022 (UTC)
Related: 12 Phrases To Use When Someone Is 'Talking Down' to You—and Why They Work, According to Psychologists. 6. "It feels great to speak with you, and I hope we can reconnect on good terms
The Lifeline program led to a rumor that the government was paying for people to get free "Obama phones", though the program was not started under the Obama administration, and the program neither covers the cost of the phone itself, nor is it paid with taxpayer funds.