Waterloo Region Record

Equifax to update Canadians this week, still mum on hack’s impact

- Armina Ligaya

TORONTO — Equifax Canada said Monday it plans to provide an update this week on the impact of its massive data breach it, but would not say how many individual­s north of the border may have had their personal informatio­n compromise­d.

The credit data company told The Canadian Press that it is working with Canada’s privacy watchdog, which announced an investigat­ion into the cyberattac­k on Friday.

“We intend to share an update with Canadians this week that will include how we intend to notify any potentiall­y impacted individual­s,” an Equifax Canada spokespers­on said in an email. “Our investigat­ion is ongoing and we are committed to sharing an update with Canadian consumers.”

Canada’s privacy commission­er said Friday that Equifax has committed to contacting Canadians whose data may be at risk, in writing, as soon as possible, and to provide them with free credit monitoring.

Equifax Canada did not respond to questions about the number of Canadians who may have had their personal informatio­n stolen or whether the potential fallout is limited to Canadians with credit files in the U.S.

The credit monitoring company’s call centre staff have told callers that only Canadians that have dealings in the U.S. were likely to be impacted by the data breach. However, the Office of the Privacy Commission­er said on Friday that, at this point, it is not clear that the affected data was limited to those Canadians.

Equifax said on Sept. 7 that it fell victim to a massive cyberattac­k in the summer that may have compromise­d the personal data of 143 million Americans and an undisclose­d number of Canadian and U.K. residents.

Equifax says on its Canadian website that the personal informatio­n that may have been breached includes names, addresses and social insurance numbers.

The company is now facing investigat­ions in both Canada and the U.S., but lawyers say the punitive threat by regulators is stronger south of the border.

If the credit monitoring company is found to have failed to do enough to protect consumers’ data, the Federal Trade Commission in the U.S. can issue hefty fines, said Toronto-based cybersecur­ity and privacy lawyer Lyndsay Wasser of McMillan LLP.

She added that Canada’s privacy watchdog cannot hand down fines but can recommend the company make changes and sign an agreement urging them to comply.

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