Home Depot Will Pay Up To $19.5 Million For Massive 2014 Data Breach (csoonline.com)
itwbennett writes: In remedy for the 2014 data breach that included the theft of data pertaining to about 56 million payment cards, as well as 53 million email addresses, Home Depot has reportedly agreed to pay $13 million to reimburse customers for their losses and $6.5 million to provide them with 18 months of identity protection services. And while the company was not required to admit wrongdoing, it has agreed to hire a chief information security officer.
Sorry we let criminals get your card info. Here's thirty cents.
18 free months of credit protection! Awesome. Home Depot really took it on the chin there, just like all the other leakers!!!
Doesn't everyone's SSN and mother's maiden name change every year or so? 18 months should totally cover that. Why just last week I got my new SSN! I think my mother's maiden name is up for renewal pretty soon as well as my address, address history, bank account numbers, and mortgage. 18 months? No sweat. I'm protected!
"If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
I can't imagine Home Depot still being in business 10 or 15 years from now.
Really? I can't imagine them not being around. Home Depot made $7 billion on $85 billion in sales last year. There is nothing on the market that is going to replace them soon. They're not really vulnerable to Amazon for much of what they sell (can't ship lumber UPS) and the local mom and pops are too specialized or too small to compete effectively.
Walking through Home Depot reminds me of every retail chain 6 months before filing for bankruptcy.
I'm in Home Depot's routinely and you have a very different impression from me. Sure it looks like a warehouse but that's actually on purpose. Their founder designed it that way. It's not supposed to look like an Apple Store. Their founder reportedly drove a forklift around their first store just before it opened trying to get scuff marks on the floor - on purpose.
Home Depot reminds me of Radio Shack circa 2010.
Umm, yeah... no. The two are nothing like each other.