Arab Times

Equifax data breach victimized 145.5 mn

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WASHINGTON, Oct 3, (AFP): Equifax said Monday an investigat­ion into the massive data breach at the credit agency discovered 2.5 million additional potential victims, bringing the total to 145.5 million.

Interim chief executive Paulino do Rego Barros, made the disclosure in a statement, saying, “Our priorities are transparen­cy and improving support for consumers. I will continue to monitor our progress on a daily basis.”

The statement said the cybersecur­ity firm Mandiant made the new estimate after a forensic review of the incident, which is believed to be one of the worst breaches because of the sensitivit­y of data leaked. The review “also has concluded that there is no evidence the attackers accessed databases located outside of the United States,” the Equifax statement said.

Mandiant found that about 8,000 Canadian consumers were impacted by the hack, fewer than the initial estimate of 100,000. The company said a review of the impact on British consumers was still being analyzed.

Separately Monday, former CEO Richard Smith said in testimony prepared for a congressio­nal hearing that the security team at Equifax failed to patch a vulnerabil­ity in March after getting a warning about the flaw.

Smith, in a statement to a congressio­nal committee released, offered a timeline of the cyber

attack which leaked social security numbers and other sensitive data.

Smith said in prepared remarks to a House panel that the company on March 9 circulated an internal memo warning about a software flaw identified by the government’s Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT).

He added that Equifax policy would have required a patch to be applied within 48 hours and that this was not done — but he could not explain why.

Equifax’s informatio­n security department ran scans that should have identified any systems that were vulnerable but failed to identify any flaws in the software known as Apache Struts.

“I understand that Equifax’s investigat­ion into these issues is ongoing,” he said in the statement.

“The company knows, however, that it was this unpatched vulnerabil­ity that allowed hackers to access personal identifyin­g informatio­n.”

Smith said he was notified of the breach on July 31, but was not aware “of the scope of this attack.” He informed the company’s lead director three weeks later, on August 22, and board meetings were held on the matter August 24 and 25.

Equifax, one of the major agencies gathering data used in credit ratings for banks, has come under fire for waiting until September 7 to publicly disclose the breach, and investigat­ors are looking into stock sales by two senior executives in August.

Smith stepped down last week amid the investigat­ion, while indicating he would remain in a consulting capacity during the investigat­ion, which includes a congressio­nal hearing Tuesday.

Smith offered a fresh apology for the attack, saying in his statement: “As CEO I was ultimately responsibl­e for what happened on my watch. Equifax was entrusted with Americans’ private data and we let them down.

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