Equifax spends $87.5 million on data breach, more expenses on deck

0
127

0

equifax.jpg

(Image: file photo)

Equifax spent $87.5 million in the third quarter on its recent data breach.

The disclosure, which came amid an earnings report that showed revenue growth of 4 percent to $834.8 million and net income of $96.3 million.

In other words, the data breach affecting 145 million Equifax customers dented the cash cow, but certainly didn’t kill it.

Related stories: Massive Equifax data breach exposes as many as 143 million customers | Equifax ex-chief admits responsibility ‘starts at the top’ for devastating data breach | Equifax’s credit report monitoring site is also vulnerable to hacking | Equifax exposes credit services’ woeful IT, processes, security | Equifax chief executive steps down after massive data breach | Equifax confirms Apache Struts security flaw it failed to patch is to blame for hack

As for the data breach costs, $55.5 million was spent on product, $17.1 million on consulting fees and $14.9 million on consumer support.

Equifax added that it incurred $4.7 million through September 30, and “have estimated a range of additional costs between $56 million and $110 million.”

ZDNET INVESTIGATIONS

Leaked TSA documents reveal New York airport’s wave of security lapses

US government pushed tech firms to hand over source code

At the US border: Discriminated, detained, searched, interrogated

Millions of Verizon customer records exposed in security lapse

Meet the shadowy tech brokers that deliver your data to the NSA

Inside the global terror watchlist that secretly shadows millions

FCC chairman voted to sell your browsing history — so we asked to see his

With a single wiretap order, US authorities listened in on 3.3 million phone calls

198 million Americans hit by ‘largest ever’ voter records leak

Britain has passed the ‘most extreme surveillance law ever passed in a democracy’

Microsoft says ‘no known ransomware’ runs on Windows 10 S — so we tried to hack it

Leaked document reveals UK plans for wider internet surveillance

Related Topics:

Security TV

Data Management

CXO

Data Centers

0