Khaleej Times

After cyber-fraud mess, Equifax may have to deal with $70B suit

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washington — As nearly half of the US population fell victim to a massive cyber-fraud at credit reporting agency Equifax, a Democrat senator has called for a probe while a class-action lawsuit seeking up to $70 billion in damages has been filed against the company.

Senator Tammy Baldwin from Wisconsin requested the Senate Commerce Committee to hold a hearing on the Equifax hack which exposed the sensitive personal data of 143 million US citizens, the New York Post reported late on Friday.

Hackers exploited a vulnerabil­ity in the company’s website applicatio­n from mid-May through July and gained access to consumer informatio­n including names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses and in some instances, driver’s license numbers, Equifax earlier said in a statement.

The breach also included credit card numbers of approximat­ely 209,000 consumers and certain dispute documents with personal identifyin­g informatio­n of approximat­ely 182,000 consumers. “I write today to urge you to hold a hearing on an issue impacting the lives of millions of Americans — the recently reported data breach at Equifax, one the nation’s largest consumer credit reporting agencies,” Baldwin wrote to the firm.

The US House Financial Services Committee has also announced to hold a hearing regarding the huge data breach.

Meanwhile, lawyers for Mary McHill and Brook Reinhard, who had their personal informatio­n stored by the company, filed a complaint in the Oregon federal court against Equifax, seeking up to $70 billion in damages, vanityfair reported. Equifax discovered the breach on July 29 but alerted the people only on September 7 after three senior executives sold shares worth almost $1.8 million, the report added.

“This is clearly a disappoint­ing event for our company and one that strikes at the heart of who we are and what we do. I apologise to consumers and our business customers for the concern and frustratio­n this causes,” chairman and CEO Richard F. Smith said in the statement.

As part of its investigat­ion into the applicatio­n vulnerabil­ity, Equifax also identified unauthoris­ed access to limited personal informatio­n of certain UK and Canadian residents. According to media reports, Equifax has been slammed by customers and security experts for an inadequate response to the data breach. —

 ?? AP ?? Equifax has been slammed by customers and security experts for an inadequate response to the data breach. —
AP Equifax has been slammed by customers and security experts for an inadequate response to the data breach. —

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