Source |
CSO |
Identifiant |
1221143 |
Date de publication |
2019-07-24 04:38:00 (vue: 2019-07-24 14:00:30) |
Titre |
Equifax\'s billion-dollar data breach disaster: Will it change executive attitudes toward security? |
Texte |
Equifax announced on Monday that it has agreed to a record-breaking settlement related to its massive 2017 data breach, which exposed the personal and financial records of more than 148 million people. The settlement requires the beleaguered credit ratings agency to spend at least $1.38 billion to resolve consumer claims against it. It creates a non-reversionary fund of $380.5 million to pay benefits to the class of consumers harmed by the breach, including cash compensation, credit monitoring, and help with identity restoration.
[ How much does a data breach cost? Here's where the money goes. | Get the latest from CSO by signing up for our newsletters. ] |
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Condensat |
$380 148 2017 against agency agreed announced article attitudes beleaguered benefits billion breach breaking cash change claims class click compensation consumer consumers cost creates credit cso data disaster: does dollar equifax executive exposed financial from full fund get goes harmed has help here how identity including its latest least massive million monday money monitoring more much newsletters non pay people personal please ratings read record records related requires resolve restoration reversionary security settlement signing spend than toward where which will |
Tags |
Data Breach
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Stories |
Equifax
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