Equifax data hack attracts attention of class-action lawyers and privacy watchdog
MONTREAL — A large-scale security breach at credit monitoring company Equifax has already attracted the attention of Canadian class-action lawyers and the country’s privacy commissioner as the fallout from the massive hack gathered momentum Friday and thrust corporate concerns about cybersecurity into the spotlight.
Several class-action law firms are circling after the Atlanta-headquartered company revealed on Thursday that it was the victim of a cyberattack during the summer that exposed the personal information of 143 million Americans and an unspecified number of Canadians.
In the U.S., the theft includes consumers’ names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses and, in some cases, driver’s licence numbers.
And yet Equifax Canada is remaining largely mum, declining to provide details about how many Canadians were affected or the data that was stolen. It said Friday it had no information to add to what its U.S. parent announced.