Las Vegas Review-Journal

Equifax says 2.5M more Americans may be affected by hack

- By Ken Sweet The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Credit report company 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 — the kind of informatio­n that could put people at significan­t risk for identity theft.

While Equifax previously said up to 100,000 Canadian citizens may have been affected, it said Monday that the completed review did not bear that out and it determined that the informatio­n of only about 8,000 Canadian consumers was involved.

The update comes as Equifax’s former CEO, Richard Smith, who announced his retirement last month, will testify in front of Congress starting Tuesday. He’s expected to face bipartisan anger from politician­s who have expressed outrage that a company tasked with securing vast amounts of personal data was unable to keep their security software up to date.

In prepared testimony, he apologized and said human error and technology failures allowed the data breach. He also apologized for the way the company handled the announceme­nt of what happened.

“To each and every person affected by this breach, I am deeply sorry that this occurred,” Smith said in his prepared remarks. “Whether your personal identifyin­g informatio­n was compromise­d, or you have had to deal with the uncertaint­y of determinin­g whether or not your personal data may have been compromise­d, I sincerely apologize. The company failed to prevent sensitive informatio­n from falling into the hands of wrongdoers.”

Equifax also faces several state and federal inquiries and numerous class-action lawsuits. At least one state, Massachuse­tts, and the cities of San Francisco and Chicago have sued Equifax as well.

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