Who's Accessing Your Data? This Infographic is a timeline highlighting the cost of the Equifax breach… so far! It has reported clean-up costs of $ 1.4 billion to date. They received $125 million in cybersecurity insurance reimbursement and the costs continue to rise.
Equifax reported 8th September 2017 that 143 million consumer records may have been stolen in a massive global data breach. Data included names, addresses and dates of birth, as well as credit card numbers in a smaller number of cases. With UK consumers, the information which may have been accessed is limited to:
- Names
- Dates of birth
- E-mail addresses
- Telephone numbers
Impact:
- 143 million consumers globally had data stolen (mainly US, Canada and 15 million UK citizens)
Five main factors of the cyber breach:
- Identification
- Detection
- Segmentation
- Data Governance
- Failure to rate-limit database requests
Failures that led to the Equifax breach:
- The exploitation of a known vulnerability on an unpatched Apache Struts server. Homeland Security had issued details of the vulnerability some months beforehand.
- Persistent attackers went undetected for months.
- Discovery of an unencrypted file of passwords on one system allowed lateral movement across multiple other systems.
- Attackers were unchallenged when they sent over 9000 queries to 51 databases containing unencrypted consumer credit data.
- 265 separate data exfiltration opportunities were missed due to the network monitoring system being inactive for 19 months as its security certificate had expired.