ViaPath claimed to empower incarcerated families—then exposed their private lives to hackers.

A Digital Shackle: How ViaPath Betrayed The People It Profits From

The Non-Financial Ledger

This was never just about data. For the people trapped in America’s carceral system, and for the families struggling to stay connected to them, this was a profound violation of what little privacy and security they had left. Global Tel*Link, rebranding itself as the softer, friendlier “ViaPath Technologies,” built its empire by monetizing human connection under duress. They charge exorbitant fees for phone calls, video chats, and messages—basic lifelines that are the only thing keeping families intact and incarcerated individuals sane. In return for this extractive business model, the absolute least they could offer is the promise that the deeply personal information they collect will be protected. They failed.

Consider the information that was exposed in the “Identified Breach” of August 2020. This wasn’t just names and email addresses. We are talking about Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, passport numbers, and unique government-issued IDs. Financial account numbers. The unique booking numbers that identify an individual within the prison system. Login credentials. This is the raw material of a person’s life, the keys to their identity, laid bare for anyone to take. For someone on the outside, identity theft is a nightmare. For someone on the inside, it is a catastrophe they are powerless to fight. They can’t simply call their bank, freeze their credit, or file a police report. They are captive, relying on the very corporation that failed them to even communicate with the outside world.

The harm transcends identity theft. The exposure of this data creates a new, invisible prison. It is the constant anxiety of not knowing who has your information or how it will be used against you. Will it be used to harass your family on the outside? To open fraudulent accounts that will saddle you with debt upon release, making reentry into society a financial impossibility? Will it be used to create a false identity that commits crimes in your name, adding years to your sentence or creating new legal battles you cannot afford? This is the psychological toll, a form of digital punishment layered on top of a physical one, inflicted not by the state, but by a corporate partner that saw these human beings as data points to be harvested, not people to be protected.

For someone on the inside, identity theft is a catastrophe they are powerless to fight. They are captive, relying on the very corporation that failed them.

This breach is a betrayal of a captive market. GTL/ViaPath’s customers do not have a choice. Their “market” consists of people forced to use their services if they want to speak to their loved ones. This monopoly power comes with an immense ethical responsibility, a responsibility the Federal Trade Commission’s order makes clear they abdicated. The detailed, remedial security program the FTC is now mandating—with its requirements for encryption, multi-factor authentication, vulnerability testing, and data minimization—is a damning indictment of the system that existed before. It is a roadmap of their negligence.

The order for credit monitoring is a bandage on a gaping wound. It is a reactive, insufficient gesture. The true cost is not measured in dollars that an insurance policy might cover. It is measured in lost peace of mind, in the destruction of trust, and in the fresh obstacles placed in the path of people already facing an uphill battle for a second chance. GTL/ViaPath didn’t just lose data; they amplified the punishment of incarceration and extended its reach from behind the prison walls into the digital lives of thousands of people who had no choice but to trust them.

Legal Receipts

The language of a government order is often dry, but in its details, it paints a clear picture of corporate failure. Below are direct excerpts from the FTC’s Decision and Order (Docket No. C-4801) that lay bare the scope of the data exposed and the extent of the security overhaul now being forced upon GTL/ViaPath.

Societal Impact Mapping

Environmental Degradation

The Federal Trade Commission’s order against GTL/ViaPath focuses exclusively on the company’s failures in data security and the subsequent harm to consumers. The legal documents provided for this investigation contain no information regarding the company’s environmental practices, carbon footprint, or impact on natural resources. While the prison-industrial complex as a whole has significant environmental implications through construction and resource consumption, this specific source does not provide the evidence necessary to map GTL/ViaPath’s direct role in that degradation. Our reporting is strictly limited to the facts available in the official record.

Public Health

The public health consequences of this data breach are primarily psychological, inflicting a severe and lasting toll on an already stressed population. The exposure of sensitive personal information like Social Security numbers, government IDs, and booking numbers creates a state of chronic anxiety and hyper-vigilance. For incarcerated individuals, the inability to control the fallout from this breach exacerbates feelings of helplessness and powerlessness, which are known contributors to depression, anxiety disorders, and other stress-related health conditions.

Families on the outside are also affected. The fear that their personal and financial data—shared with GTL/ViaPath to maintain contact with a loved one—could be used for malicious purposes adds another layer of stress to their already difficult circumstances. This constant state of worry can manifest in physical health problems, including elevated blood pressure, sleep disturbances, and a weakened immune system. The breach, therefore, acts as a public health crisis in miniature, radiating outwards from the initial negligence to poison the well-being of an entire community connected by the carceral system.

Economic Inequality

GTL/ViaPath’s business model is built on extracting wealth from communities disproportionately affected by poverty. The data breach deepens this existing economic inequality. The victims are precisely the people least equipped to handle the financial devastation of identity theft. They often lack the savings to weather fraudulent charges, the legal resources to untangle complex fraud cases, and the time off work needed to spend hours on the phone with banks and credit agencies.

For a person preparing for release, the consequences are even more dire. A credit history destroyed by fraud can make it impossible to secure housing, obtain a loan for a car needed for work, or even pass an employer’s background check. The breach effectively erects new barriers to successful reentry, perpetuating cycles of poverty and recidivism. The FTC-mandated credit monitoring is a necessary but minimal stopgap. It does not compensate for the lost opportunities, the damaged financial futures, or the way this corporate failure has tilted an already uneven playing field further against the most vulnerable.

$1,000,000
The Potential Cost of Ruining One Life. Per Person.

What Now?

The FTC order is not justice; it is a forced course correction after the damage was done. The system that allows corporations to profit from incarceration while failing to protect the people trapped within it remains. Accountability requires vigilance.

Corporate Watchlist

  • Global Tel*Link Corporation (d/b/a GTL, ViaPath Technologies)
    3120 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 300, Falls Church, Virginia, 22042
  • Telmate, LLC (d/b/a ViaPath Technologies)
    3120 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 300, Falls Church, Virginia, 22042
  • TouchPay Holdings, LLC (d/b/a GTL Financial Services)
    10005 Technology Boulevard West, Suite 130, Dallas, Texas, 75220

Regulatory Oversight

  • The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the agency responsible for enforcing this 20-year order. Their oversight is the only formal check on these companies’ future behavior.

Take Action

Holding these corporations accountable requires more than government oversight. The real power lies in dismantling the system that makes them rich.

  • Support Prison Abolitionist Groups: Donate to or volunteer with local and national organizations working to end mass incarceration and challenge the prison-industrial complex. They are fighting the root cause.
  • Amplify Voices from Inside: Follow and support organizations that help incarcerated people share their stories. Public awareness is a powerful tool against corporate abuse in the shadows.
  • Advocate for Regulation: Demand that your elected officials cap the rates for prison phone calls and other services. Fight the predatory contracts that cities and states sign with companies like GTL/ViaPath.

The source document for this investigation is attached below.

ViaPath ads like this where they brag about help incarcerated inmates ring extra hollow now

Oh? A wild FTC press release against ViaPath has appeared!: https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/02/ftc-finalizes-order-global-tellink-over-security-failures-led-breach-sensitive-data

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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

My background includes a Supply Chain Management degree from Michigan State University's Eli Broad College of Business, and years working inside the industries I now cover.

Every post on this site was either written or personally reviewed and edited by me before publication.

Learn more about my research standards and editorial process by visiting my About page

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