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Home Android

T-Mobile issues fix for IMS error that rendered many LG phones useless

May 24, 2022
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What you need to know

  • T-Mobile has addressed a software-related problem that rendered many LG phones unusable.
  • Owners of LG phones on the carrier’s network were greeted with a persistent IMS error message, preventing them from using their devices.
  • T-Mobile may be to blame for the issue.

LG officially ended its smartphone business more than a year ago, but the company continues to push security updates to eligible phones and has even recently detailed its upcoming Android 12 update plans for selected devices. Unfortunately, a recent network update has rendered many old LG phones inoperable.

It appears T-Mobile inadvertently caused the issue, and the carrier has now fixed it. According to The T-Mo Report blog site, T-Mobile has rolled out a fix for the error message that prevented many LG phone owners from using their handsets. If you are one of those affected, you should restart your device to apply the fix.

The bug affected the IMS (IP multimedia subsystem) service and persistently pushed pop-up alerts on screen with an error message stating “the LG IMS has stopped,” making it impossible to use affected devices. For those who are unfamiliar, IMS is the framework in charge of handling text messages and phone calls over an IP network.

A considerable number of LG phone users who own many of the best LG phones, including the LG G-series, V-series, and the LG Velvet, were greeted with the IMS error message. Complaints poured in on sites like Reddit and Twitter.

Neither closing the pop-up message nor resetting an affected phone did anything to banish the problem. Some users were able to find a temporary solution by removing the SIM card, but inserting it again resulted in the same error message.

T-Mobile’s support team on Twitter told customers that it was aware of the issue and that it would release a fix soon. The problem has apparently been caused by a network-side system update rolled out by T-Mobile. The carrier discovered the bug only after the update was already deployed.

While the issue has now been fixed, it highlights the risk of continuing to use a smartphone that no longer receives support from the manufacturer.

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