Los Angeles Times

Equifax prospering 1 year after giant data breach

Firm reported record revenue last quarter. Probes continue, and a lawsuit is pending.

- By Ivan Levingston and Jenny Surane Levingston and Surane write for Bloomberg.

Data breach? What data breach?

One year after Equifax Inc. disclosed a hack of its computers that shook the financial world, sparking an FBI review and slashing a third off the company’s share price in one week, investors and the public seem to have largely moved on.

The company, whose shares have recovered almost 90% of the losses suffered in the plunge, will probably post a record annual profit next year. Equifax said there was no mass defection of clients after the breach put half the U.S. population’s sensitive personal informatio­n at risk, and congressio­nal hearings have yielded no major changes to federal laws protecting data. The credit-reporting company’s revenue last quarter reached a record $877 million despite the hack.

“It was certainly a bump in the road, but it doesn’t look like anything else is going to dramatical­ly change the future,” said Brett Horn, an analyst at Morningsta­r Inc.

Between May and July of last year, criminals exploited a vulnerabil­ity in the software Equifax used to build its website and absconded with data on credit cards, Social Security numbers and driver’s licenses.

The company faced withering criticism after disclosing the hack in September 2017, and more than 90% of consumers have taken some action to protect themselves from identity theft in the aftermath.

A Government Accountabi­lity Office report released Friday details steps that have been taken since the incident, noting that Equifax’s primary regulators are still investigat­ing.

“One year after they publicly revealed the massive 2017 breach, Equifax and other big credit reporting agencies keep profiting off a business model that rewards their failure to protect personal informatio­n,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (DMass.), who requested the report, said in a statement.

An Equifax spokeswoma­n declined to make company executives available for an interview, but the company said in an emailed statement that it has made a number of improvemen­ts since the breach, including a more than $200-million boost to this year’s budget for security and technology.

“We have enhanced our leadership team to include some of the most experience­d cybersecur­ity and technology profession­als in the industry, notably new Chief Informatio­n Security Officer Jamil Farshchi and Chief Technology Officer Bryson Koehler,” the spokeswoma­n said.

After the breach, legislator­s held hearings and proposed policies to guard consumers’ data. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the FBI looked into the hack, and the Federal Trade Commission started an investigat­ion.

California enacted sweeping data-privacy rules, and Vermont passed a law regulating data brokers. Eight state banking commission­ers, including New York’s, signed a consent order with Equifax requiring the company to bolster oversight.

“There’s now momentum building among state government­s in the U.S., regulators, and regulators abroad to adopt stricter cybersecur­ity regimes to give consumers more control of their data,” said Joseph Facciponti, an attorney with expertise in cybersecur­ity. “It’s a tipping point in the public’s consciousn­esses.”

Free credit freezes will now be required as part of legislatio­n rolling back the Dodd-Frank financial regulation­s, but some argue more action is needed.

“One year later, Equifax still hasn’t paid a price for putting 150 million U.S. consumers in harm’s way,” said Mike Litt, consumer campaign director at U.S. Public Interest Research Group, which works for tougher consumer protection laws. “There hasn’t really been consequenc­es, at least not financial consequenc­es, and that’s ultimately what’s needed.”

A class-action lawsuit pending in an Atlanta federal court might eventually bring some of that financial pain to Equifax. The suit, a consolidat­ion of various cases representi­ng a nationwide class, is in its early stages as it winds its way through the court system.

The data siphoned from Equifax probably won’t ever show up as one big package for sale on the dark web, said Munish Walther-Puri, chief research officer of Terbium Labs, which monitors data on the dark web. Instead, he said, hackers are likely to bundle the informatio­n with details from other breaches — such as medical data — and sell it in packages known as Fullz.

A Fullz bundle typically includes a person’s name, Social Security number, birth date and account data and sells for about $30 on the dark web, according to Experian.

“Prior to Equifax, there was a solid layer of informatio­n out there about people,” Walther-Puri said. “The Equifax data really fills out a lot of that packaging.”

 ?? Justin Lane EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? BETWEEN MAY and July of last year, hackers exploited a vulnerabil­ity in Equifax’s software to abscond with data on credit cards, Social Security numbers and driver’s licenses. Above, on the f loor of the NYSE.
Justin Lane EPA/Shuttersto­ck BETWEEN MAY and July of last year, hackers exploited a vulnerabil­ity in Equifax’s software to abscond with data on credit cards, Social Security numbers and driver’s licenses. Above, on the f loor of the NYSE.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States