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Anthem To Pay $115 Million In The Largest Data Breach Settlement Ever (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader quotes CNET: Anthem, the largest health insurance company in the U.S., has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit over a 2015 data breach for a record $115 million, according to lawyers for the plaintiffs. The settlement still has to be approved by US District Court Judge Lucy Koh, who is scheduled to hear the case on August 17 in San Jose, California. And Anthem, which didn't immediately respond to a request for confirmation and comment, isn't admitting any admitting any wrongdoing, according to a statement it made to CyberScoop acknowledging the settlement.

But if approved, it would be the largest data breach settlement in history, according to the plaintiffs' lawyers, who announced the agreement Friday. The funds would be used to provide victims of the data breach at least two years of credit monitoring and to reimburse customers for breach-related expenses. The settlement would also guarantee a certain level of funding for "information security to implement or maintain numerous specific changes to its data security systems, including encryption of certain information and archiving sensitive data with strict access controls," the plaintiff attorneys said.

The breach compromised data for 80 million people, including their social security numbers, birthdays, street addresses (and email addresses) as well as income data. The $115 million settlement averages out to $1.43 for every person who was affected.

8 of 56 comments (clear)

  1. Credit monitoring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They courts still haven't figured out a legitimate way to compensate or help affected individuals if they're still just trying to fund credit monitoring.
    Companies with breaches like this should face real, tangible consequences. :-/

    1. Re:Credit monitoring? by gweihir · · Score: 2

      Prison time for those responsible in management, up to and including the CEO. Before that happens, nothing will change.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  2. WOW...Are you kidding ????? by sit1963nz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So a pirated music file is worth tens of thousands of dollars, but a persons confidential medical history is worth $1.43

    wow.....just effing wow.

    And here is the funny part, the $110 million is probably considered a tax deductible expense, so the victims are in effect paying themselves a portion of the compensation.

    Seems this is true.
    Being in power is not so you can punish the poor, its to ensure the rich don't get punished.

    1. Re:WOW...Are you kidding ????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      So a pirated music file is worth tens of thousands of dollars, but a persons confidential medical history is worth $1.43

      I'm actually surprised by this. Do a Google search for "cost of data breach" ... first hit is an IBM report. Take with a grain of salt, but, they claim it should be $141 per record on average.

      So, looks like Anthem got a ~99% discount somehow - it should have cost $11.2 billion.

  3. Correction by Solandri · · Score: 2

    The $115 million settlement averages out to $1.43 for every person who was affected.

    Class action lawyers get about 15% of the total settlement amount. So the actual breakdown is $17.25 million to the lawyers, $1.22 for each person affected.

  4. And administrative fees by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 3, Informative

    Reading the settlement agreement provides the following disbursement

    As further described in this Agreement, the Settlement Fund shall be used by the Settlement Administrator to pay for:
    (a) all reasonable Administrative Expenses;
    (b) the Taxes described in Sections 3;
    (c) Service Payments award by the Court, as described in Section 11;
    (d) attorneys’ fees and costs approved by the Court, as described in Section 12;
    (e) Credit Services as described in Section 4;
    (f) Alternative Compensation as described in Section 5;
    (g)Out-of-Pocket Costs as described in Section 6.

    So the fund also covers taxes and administrative expenses, such as putting up a website where class members can go to register to get their money.

  5. Anthem is worth $50.39 Billion as of June 25 2017 by Required+Snark · · Score: 3, Informative
    That is their market capitalization today.

    The fine is 0.23% of their market value, and has someone else pointed out it is tax deductible. Additionally it is not a single payment, so it will be spread out over two or more years.

    This will have zero impact on the economics of the company, which means it will have zero deterrent effect on Anthem or any other busness in their sector. Or for any other business in the US, for that matter.

    It is, in short, a joke.

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
  6. Ridiculously paltry sum. by Ihlosi · · Score: 2

    This is not going to hurt, so nothing will change.