The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Equifax breach: Legislator­s’ criticism, what you can do

- By Ken Sweet AP Business Writer

NEW YORK » There’s no way around it: The news from credit reporting company Equifax that 143 million Americans had their informatio­n exposed is extremely serious.

Crucial pieces of personal data that criminals could use to commit identity theft — Social Security numbers, birthdates, address histories, legal names — were all obtained. That’s informatio­n that cannot change. And once that data is out there, it’s basically out there forever.

“The crown jewels of personal informatio­n were exposed and potentiall­y stolen,” said John Ulzheimer, an independen­t credit consultant who previously worked at Equifax.

Equifax’s key role in the financial industry makes this breach more alarming than previous ones at Yahoo or retailers. It’s a storehouse of personal informatio­n, like how much people owe on their houses and whether they have court judgments against them.

Lenders rely on the informatio­n collected by three big credit bureaus — Equifax, TransUnion and Experian — to help them decide whether to approve financing for homes, cars and credit cards. Credit checks are sometimes done by employers when deciding whom to hire for a job.

Atlanta-based Equifax said Thursday that “criminals” exploited a U.S. website applicatio­n to access the files between mid-May and July of this year. It discovered the hack July 29, but waited until Thursday to warn consumers.

As a consumer, what to do:

Beyond the usual steps of checking credit reports regularly and watching for abnormal transactio­ns on your accounts, it may be time to take more extreme measures to lock down your informatio­n.

The strongest possible option a person can take immediatel­y is placing what’s known as a credit freeze on their files with the major credit bureaus. That locks down a person’s informatio­n, making it impossible to open new accounts and bank cards in their name.

But taking that option also locks you out from opening new accounts. It also can come with a fee with each of the bureaus, depending on which state you live in.

“The credit freeze is the nuclear option of credit protection. But in the wake of a breach this big, it’s worth considerin­g,” said Matt Schulz, an analyst with CreditCard­s.com.

Consumers will need to be more careful about checking their credit reports. U.S. law gives every American the right to get those files for free once a year from the three major bureaus. While many websites market access to your credit reports, the official one is annual-

creditrepo­rt.com.

It’s best to spread those requests out over the year — do one every four months, experts say. And expect to check this informatio­n not just in the immediate future, but for the long term — potentiall­y years.

“Bad guys can be very patient with data. This should be a wake-up call to be even more diligent with your informatio­n,” Schulz said.

Ulzheimer says an option consumers should consider is setting up fraud alerts on your files. That would require creditors to contact you directly, usually by phone, for approval before allowing an account to be opened. That gives people a more active role, rather passively monitoring or freezing your entire file. Bureaus also must contact each other when a fraud alert is placed.

Need an even more extreme step? People can request to change their Social Security number with

the Social Security Administra­tion if they have repeatedly been a victim of identity fraud under their original number.

Equifax has a website, https://www.equifaxsec­urity2017.com/, where people can check if their informatio­n may have been stolen. Consumers can also call 866-447-7559 for informatio­n. The company also says it will send mail to all who had personally identifiab­le informatio­n stolen.

Size and scope

This isn’t the biggest data

breach in history. That indignity still belongs to Yahoo, which was targeted in at least two separate digital burglaries that affected more than 1 billion of its users’ accounts throughout the world. But no Social Security numbers or drivers’ license informatio­n were disclosed in the Yahoo break-in.

Equifax’s security lapse could be the largest theft involving Social Security numbers, one of the most common methods used to confirm a person’s identity in the U.S. It eclipses a 2015

hack at health insurer Anthem Inc. that involved the Social Security numbers of about 80 million people.

Any data breach threatens to tarnish a company’s reputation, but it is especially mortifying for Equifax, whose entire business revolves around being a secure storehouse and providing a clear financial profile of consumers that lenders and other businesses can trust.

And a security expert said the website created Equifax to help customers find out if their informatio­n was stolen

raises its own security questions. The site looks like the kind set up by attackers to trick people into disclosing informatio­n, says Georgia Weidman, founder and chief technology officer for security firm Shevirah.

“It’s teaching people entirely the wrong things about using the internet securely,” Weidman said. She said says she’s also troubled by Equifax’s approach to security generally, including reports that it didn’t respond to basic scripting bugs it was warned about last year.

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