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Equifax Tells Investors They Could Be Breached Again - And That They're Still Profitable (nypost.com)

"Equifax executives will forgo their 2017 bonuses," reports CNBC. But according to the New York Post, the company "hasn't lost any significant business customers... Equifax largely does business with banks and other financial institutions -- not with the people they collect information on."

Even though it's facing more than 240 class-action lawsuits, Equifax's revenue actually increased 3.8% from July to September, to a whopping $834.8 million, while their net income for that period was $96.3 million -- which is still more than the $87.5 million that the breach cost them, according to a new article shared by chicksdaddy: The disclosure, made as part of the company's quarterly filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, is the first public disclosure of the direct costs of the incident, which saw the company's stock price plunge by more than 30% and wiped out billions of dollars in value to shareholders. Around $55.5m of the $87.5m in breach-related costs stems from product costs â" mostly credit monitoring services that it is offering to affected individuals. Professional fees added up to another $17.1m for Equifax and consumer support costs totaled $14.9m, the company said. Equifax also said it has spent $27.3 million of pretax expenses stemming from the cost of investigating and remediating the hack to Equifax's internal network as well as legal and other professional expenses.

But the costs are likely to continue. Equifax is estimating costs of $56 million to $110 million in "contingent liability" in the form of free credit monitoring and identity theft protection to all U.S. consumers as a good will gesture. The costs provided by Equifax are an estimate of the expenses necessary to provide this service to those who have signed up or will sign up by the January 31, 2018 deadline. So far, however, the company has only incurred $4.7 million through the end of September. So, while the upper bound of those contingent liability costs is high, there's good reason to believe that they will never be reached.

The Post reports that some business customers "have delayed new contracts until Equifax proves that they've done enough to shore up their cybersecurity."

But in their regulatory filing Thursday, Equifax admitted that "We cannot assure that all potential causes of the incident have been identified and remediated and will not occur again."

7 of 90 comments (clear)

  1. Equifax should be shutdown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The fact it still exists shows how corrupt things are.

    1. Re:Equifax should be shutdown by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This. How is it even possible that they are still operating? Anyone else doing a fraction of what happened there would be in prison forever and his assets gone to compensate the victims. How are they not only still doing business but actually having to think whether to pay their C-Levels a bonus? I.e. how are they even still able to pay a bonus?

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      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re: Equifax should be shutdown by dnaumov · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact that it still exists merely illustrates how badly nerds misunderstand what matters in business survival. As for why Equifax still has any customers, the reason is not corruption and is very simple - the average person is dumb as a brick.

    3. Re: Equifax should be shutdown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As for why Equifax still has any customers

      That's because their customers weren't affected by the breach. In fact Equifax is shielding their customers from these kind of breaches by being the ones that deal with the data and acting as a scape goat.

    4. Re: Equifax should be shutdown by volodymyrbiryuk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also despite popular belief the people who's data is being collected by Equifax are not the customers but the commodities.

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      sudo rm -r -f --no-preserve-root /
    5. Re:Equifax should be shutdown by gtall · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Easy. There are no laws to prevent companies like EquiFax from sucking up your information and selling it to the highest bidder or having it pilfered by the lowest scum.

      The Republicans are big believers in "business", they won't rein in companies like this. The Libretards believe information wants to be free. The Democrats will write new legislation each year for the next 10 years and still not solve the problem.

      And the problem is: you want a loan or credit, who vouches for your background? There is a market there and it is going to be filled. The only issue is how secure is that information. Hanging the company officials won't stop the information getting pissed away. They'll simply get better lawyers.

  2. It's true by bobstreo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They won't have to factor in the costs of lawyers until later.

    People should ignore the class action suits, and file millions of personal suits, assuming there are sufficient ambulance chasers available to work knowing they'll only be paid if they win.