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Equifax says 100,000 Canadians could have been affected by last week's data breach

XiaNaphryz

LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT
http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/business/equifax-canada-cyberbreach-1.4296475

Equifax says 100,000 Canadians impacted by cybersecurity breach
Cyberbreach earlier this year may have compromised information of 143 million people in U.S.
CBC News
15 Minutes Ago

Equifax Canada said a massive cybersecurity breach at the company may have exposed the personal information of about 100,000 Canadian consumers.

Equifax is a consumer information company that provides, among other services, credit information and credit ratings on individuals.

The company disclosed on Sept. 7 that the cybersecurity breach exposed the personal data of about 143 million Americans but, at that time, did not reveal the number of Canadians involved.

Equifax Canada said the information includes names, addresses, social insurance numbers (SIN) and, in limited cases, credit card numbers.

"We apologize to Canadian consumers who have been impacted by this incident," said Lisa Nelson, president and general manager of Equifax Canada.

"We understand it has also been frustrating that Equifax Canada has been unable to provide clarity on who was impacted until the investigation is complete. Our focus now is on providing impacted consumers with the support they need," Nelson said in a release.

Canada's privacy commissioner said Friday it had opened an investigation into the data breach after receiving several complaints and dozens of calls from concerned Canadians.

Equifax said it has been working with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada (OPC) and will be sending notices via mail directly to all impacted consumers outlining the steps they should take.

"For impacted Canadians we will also be providing complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection for 12 months," the firm said.

The company is also telling Canadian consumers to be vigilant in reviewing their account statements and credit reports. Equifax said consumers should immediately report any unauthorized activity to their financial institutions, and it recommends that they monitor their personal information.
 

mdubs

Banned
Pretty messed up if people's SIN numbers are out there. Easy identity theft if people have that information.
 

Mugsy

Member
l5ZYaes.gif
 

Riptwo

Member
Really obnoxious that they waited until today to disclose this, especially with the "only a small number of Canadians with US dealings were affected" bullshit we heard last week.
 

cameron

Member
So like a ~0.3% chance that you're fucked.
Equifax said it has been working with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada (OPC) and will be sending notices via mail directly to all impacted consumers outlining the steps they should take.
Will bump when I get the letter.
 

kswiston

Member
Revenue Canada already leaked my info a few years back. Someone stole a portable harddrive or something of that nature. I think that they gave me 3 years of identity theft protection for that.
 
I may be impacted by this, I registered with Equifax back in the spring to get a credit report for a new apartment. Oh boy!
 
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