We arent getting $125 from Equifax after all

Secure Da Bag

Veteran
Joined
Dec 20, 2017
Messages
43,745
Reputation
22,299
Daps
135,414
Aren’t you a lawyer? Help us secure the bag, worthless ass nikka. :what:

just-a-gangsta.gif


DgeA--MW0AE6ogL.jpg:large
 

Swirv

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Jul 1, 2012
Messages
17,723
Reputation
3,051
Daps
56,085

  • BY
    LUKE DARBY
Culture
Equifax Won't Give Anyone $125 After All
It turns out the credit bureau company never had enough money set aside to pay back all 147 million people affected by one of the largest data breaches in history.

82_Luke_Darby-gray.jpg

BY
LUKE DARBY
August 1, 2019
GettyImages-851025676.jpg

Smith Collection/Gado
Equifax had one of the biggest security breaches in history, with hackers acquiring the personal information of 147 million people. That includes names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers. It's enough to potentially wreck people's credit for years, and because there are only a very small number of credit bureaus that own all other credit services, many of those people likely had no idea they were even customers of Equifax in the first place.

There was some small consolation though. According to the New York Times, "the F.T.C., the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 50 states and United States territories agreed to a global settlement with Equifax that promised up to $700 million in payments, including fines." Starting last week, people could go to an Equifax website to see if they qualified for a $125 pay out as part of that settlement. The link quickly went viral. New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez encouraged her 5 million followers to see if they qualified, tweeting, "Everyone: go get your check from Equifax! $125 is a nice chunk of change. Get that money and pay off a bill, sock it away, take a day off, treat yourself, whatever you’d like - but cash that check! "

Unfortunately, the deal seems too good to be true. The $125 is evidently the upper limit of what Equifax and the Federal Trade Commission have agreed to pay per person, and now the F.TC. is pushing for people to accept free credit monitoring instead. Robert Schoshinski, assistant director of the F.T.C.’s division of privacy and identity protection, wrote in a statement that public response has been "overwhelming," adding:

But the pot of money that pays for that part of the settlement is $31 million. A large number of claims for cash instead of credit monitoring means only one thing: each person who takes the money option will wind up only getting a small amount of money. Nowhere near the $125 they could have gotten if there hadn’t been such an enormous number of claims filed.

Of the $700 million Equifax agreed to pay out, only 0.044 percent was designated to repay the people affected by the breach with the rest, apparently, paying for fines. The company and the F.T.C. seem to have been counting on a very small portion of eligible people actually making claims, which would explain why Equifax required individual people to log in and apply rather than just mail checks directly. The company, after all, knows everyone who was affected, what information was taken, and has their addresses on record—mailing checks would have been much more straightforward, but would have required them to pay out to everyone affected, not just the people who managed to check in. And $31 million evenly split would have meant a $0.21 check—not even a quarter—each to 147 million people, which certainly wouldn't help the company's image.

WATCH
10 Gym Essentials Pietro Boselli Can't Live Without
That $31 million pay-out was a steal then, and the people affected by the company's lax security have no way to hold them accountable. Usually, when that many people are affected by a company's negligence they can band together in a class action suit in the hopes of recuperating some damages. But like many companies, Equifax requires customers to agree to binding arbitration as a cost of doing business with them, meaning that it's legally impossible to sue them for any kind of negligence. When the company offered to let people check their website to see if their data had been compromised, they were required to first click away their right to sue. Shortly after the breach became public, the Senate voted on a bill that would have allowed consumers to bring class action lawsuits against banking businesses like Equifax. A tie-breaking vote cast by Vice President Mike Pence killed it.

ADVERTISEMENT
In the end, $0.21 might be the best anyone can hope for.

Update: A previous version of this story wrongly stated that $31 million split between 147 million people was $4.74, not $0.21. We've corrected the story and regret the error.


21 cents?

:comeon:
Get these bytches out office!
 

shopthatwrecks

Certified Babble Detector Badge Number #281713
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
47,669
Reputation
12,929
Daps
128,850
Reppin
44 bricks...acre shaker
aint trippin still eatin #settlementgang

wasnt gone be the biggest check i got from a settlement anyway..

ate good off heartmedia ..due to multiple email accounts

i know 2 chicks..who been breakin me off alot of the cali shyt

im finna get a piece of the 250k george tyndall scandak at usc....

kuz i hit em off with a piece of the bluecross network settlement a couple yrs ago
 
Top