The
suspect, a 33-year-old former Seattle technology company
software engineer identified as Paige Thompson, made her initial
appearance in U.S. District Court in Seattle on Monday, the U.S.
Attorney's office said.
According to a complaint filed in the District Court for the
Western District of Washington at Seattle, Thompson posted
information from her hack, which occurred between March 12 and
July 17, on coding platform GitHub. Another user saw the post
and notified Capital One of the breach.
Law enforcement officials were able to track Thompson down as
the page she posted on contained her full name as part of its
digital address, the complaint said. Capital One said it
identified the hack on July 19.
A representative for the U.S. Attorney's office said it was not
immediately clear what the suspect's motive was.
The incident is expected to cost between $100 million and $150
million in 2019, mainly because of customer notifications,
credit monitoring and legal support, Capital One said.
The hacker did not gain access to credit card account numbers,
but about 140,000 Social Security numbers and 80,000 linked bank
account numbers were compromised, Capital One said. Other
personal information accessed included phone numbers and credit
scores.
About 1 million social insurance numbers of the company's
Canadian credit card customers were also compromised.
The Capital One hacker was able to gain access to the data
through a misconfigured web application firewall, the U.S.
Attorney's office said.
Credit-reporting company Equifax Inc <EFX.N> said last week it
would pay up to $700 million to settle claims it broke the law
during a 2017 data breach when roughly 147 million people had
information, including Social Security numbers and driver's
license data, compromised.
Capital One shares fell 4 percent in late extended trading.
(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonya
Hepinstall and Peter Cooney)
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