Criticism of Equifax data breach response
mounts, shares tumble
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[September 09, 2017]
By Dustin Volz and David Shepardson
(Reuters) - Equifax Inc <EFX.N> faced a
storm of criticism on Friday over a hack that may have compromised
personal data for some 143 million Americans, with consumers clamoring
for answers and cyber security experts questioning the response to the
massive breach.
Lawmakers and regulators joined the chorus, scrutinizing the company's
follow-up as it encouraged potential victims to sign up for free credit
monitoring services. Equifax shares tumbled as much as 18 percent, the
biggest one-day drop in 16 years, as complaints mounted that the
company's online and phone support systems were either broken or
insufficient.
The hack, among the largest ever recorded, was especially alarming due
to the richness of the information exposed, which included names,
birthdays, addresses and Social Security and driver's license numbers,
cyber researchers said.
"Another day, another dumpster fire in cyber security,” said Ryan
Kalember, senior vice president of cyber security firm Proofpoint. The
breach was "especially troubling" because companies that have suffered
data breaches typically offer free credit monitoring services from firms
like Equifax, which has now itself suffered a huge cyber attack, he
added.
Bigger hacks, such as those disclosed by Yahoo last year, did not put as
much sensitive information at risk.
Responding to criticism, Equifax apologized in a corporate statement
Friday evening for any inconvenience caused by its support website or
call center.
It said the site was now functioning properly and that it had tripled
the size of its call center team to more than 2,000 agents, with more to
be added.
Moody’s Investors Service said on Friday that the breach would impede
Equifax’s growth over the next three to four quarters and hurt its
reputation as a custodian of consumer data.
The company would incur significant costs to remediate the breach,
potential litigation and regulatory action, and higher cyber insurance
premiums, Moody's said. But it said that Equifax's rating and stable
outlook were not affected.
Credit monitoring services such as Equifax collect vast amounts of
financial information from consumers without their knowledge, working
with banks and other lenders, for example, to track the creditworthiness
of individuals.
At least five state attorneys general, including those of New York and
Illinois, said they were formally investigating the breach.[nL2N1LP19R]
Two proposed class-action lawsuits, one filed in Portland, Oregon, and
one in Atlanta, alleged that Equifax had been negligent in protecting
consumer data. [nL2N1LP14B]
Atlanta-based Equifax disclosed the breach on Thursday and said the
company had discovered it on July 29. It said hackers accessed accounts
between mid-May and July, and some British and Canadian residents were
also affected.[nL4N1LO5FJ]
The company has not said specifically how attackers were able to break
in or why it did not disclose the breach sooner.
Robert W. Baird & Co analyst Jeffrey Meuler wrote to clients that the
hackers used a flaw in open-source Struts software, distributed by the
nonprofit Apache Software Foundation.
Meuler in the note did not provide the source of the information, and he
did not respond to requests for comment.
Equifax did not respond to questions seeking comment.
Struts is widely used in major companies, and an Apache spokeswoman said
it appeared that Equifax had not applied the patches for flaws that have
been discovered this year.
In March, Apache warned of one flaw, and attack code soon circulated,
with hackers exploiting taking advantage soon after that, researchers
said.
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Trading information and the company logo are displayed on a screen
where the stock is traded on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., September 8, 2017.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The Federal Bureau of Investigation said it is tracking the data
breach. A U.S. intelligence official told Reuters it was too soon to
know if the attack was strictly criminal in nature or if it had the
backing of a foreign government.
WAIVED LEGAL RIGHTS?
Equifax drew scrutiny for terms of service that accompanied a free
credit monitoring offering to all U.S. consumers worried about the
data breach that it promoted on its support website.
Agreeing to the terms appeared to forfeit some rights to sue
individually or join a class-action suit, but Equifax said on its
website that the arbitration clause applied only to the credit
monitoring offer and not to any damages caused by the recently
discovered data breach.
The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, however, still had
concerns with the terms associated with the free credit monitoring
offer. It is "troubling that Equifax is forcing people to waive
legal rights in order to receive fraud monitoring after the
company’s breach put their personal information at risk," a CFPB
spokesman said in a statement.
Some cyber security experts criticized Equifax for setting up a
support website under a different domain than the company's main
website, mirroring a tactic that can be used to fraudulently collect
data.
CALLS FOR HEARINGS
The U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Committee and
the House Energy and Commerce Committee both announced plans to hold
hearings examining the breach.
Representative Ted Lieu asked Equifax why it waited so long to
disclose the breach and has asked the House Judiciary Committee to
hold a hearing with the three major credit reporting agencies to
explain how they will prevent future attacks.
Within the past two years, Equifax has had W-2 federal wage tax data
stolen from its website and a subsidiary. Larger rival Experian Plc
<EXPN.L> reported a data breach two years ago involving some 15
million people.
The Republican and Democratic leaders of the Senate Finance
Committee wrote to Equifax with a series of questions about its
required safeguards and asked that committee staffers be briefed by
Sept. 15.
Senator Richard Blumenthal pointed to Equifax's previous incidents
and said it had "no excuse" for not strengthening cyber security,
and called on the U.S. Federal Trade Commission to investigate.
Equifax shares closed down 13.7 percent at $123.23 after touching a
more than seven-month low.
Shares of rival TransUnion <TRU.N> finished down 3.8 percent, while
Experian closed down 0.7 percent on the London Stock Exchange.
Equifax handles data on more than 820 million consumers and 91
million businesses worldwide and manages employee information from
more than 7,100 employers, according to its website.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz and David Shepardson in Washington;
Additional reporting by Aishwarya Venugopal, Sweta Singh, Pete
Schroeder, Jonathan Stempel, Mark Hosenball and Joseph Menn; Editing
by Meredith Mazzilli and Leslie Adler)
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