The FTC Is Investigating the Equifax Breach. Here’s Why That’s a Big Deal.

3D secure, online fraud, card lending, asset-backed securitizations

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143 million consumers were affected by the Equifax breach. That averages out to just about every US household.  As issues abound how the breach happened and how Equifax is positioning its freeze service to protect against future abuse, regulators are beginning to line up to assess what went right and what went wrong as this massive breach continues to unfold.

There has been some talk about the quality of Equifax’s response.  After finding that I personally had my record breached, getting this response did not make me feel really confident:

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That is another good reason to see various agencies looking at the issue.

In our digitally dependent world, bureaus fill an important need.  Surely every business (and as we recently saw with in US Politics, every government entity) is vulnerable.  The long term impact remains to be seen.  Will it reduce the growth of credit because consumers have frozen access to their files?  Will it amp up requirements to protect data?  It remains to be seen, but expect incremental control from this highly visible area.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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