National Post (National Edition)

Equifax says 8,000 Canadians affected

- The Canadian Press and The Associated Press

DATA BREACH

Equifax Inc. said Monday it has revised down the number of Canadians affected by its high-profile data breach and now puts the number at about 8,000 customers.

The company previously estimated that some 100,000 Canadians could have had their personal informatio­n compromise­d before a forensic review by cybersecur­ity firm Mandiant found the actual number to be much lower.

Equifax said Monday that an additional 2.5 million Americans may have been affected by the massive security breach of its systems, bringing the total to 145.5 million people who had their personal informatio­n accessed or stolen.

Equifax said the company it hired to investigat­e the breach, Mandiant, has concluded its investigat­ion and plans to release the results “promptly.”

The company also said it would update its own notificati­on for people who want to check if they were among those affected by Oct. 8.

The informatio­n stolen earlier this year included names, Social Security numbers, birth dates and addresses — informatio­n that could put people at significan­t risk for identity theft.

Equifax says the review also determined that some Canadians had their credit card informatio­n hacked and it will be mailing out written notices to all potentiall­y impacted Canadians, but did not provide a specific estimate.

On a website update, Equifax's Canadian division said it has not yet mailed out any notices and made clear it would not be making any unsolicite­d calls or emails about the issue.

Equifax first notified the public of the security breach on Sept. 7, though it said the unauthoriz­ed access is thought to have happened Consumer credit reporting firm Equifax now says only about 8,000 Canadians may have been affected in the massive data breach earlier this year that saw personal informatio­n stolen on upward of 140 million Americans. from May 13 to July 30, with Equifax's security team catching the hack on July 29.

The company has said that it believes that hackers accessed Equifax Canada's systems through a consumer website applicatio­n intended for use by U.S. consumers.

Equifax is facing investigat­ions in Canada and the U.S., as well as at least two proposed class-actions filed in Canada.

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