Friend, You know that $125 you’re supposed to get from Equifax for its data breach? Yeah, that’s not happening.1 The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Equifax let us think we were going to get a cash payout, when instead they intended claimants to sign up for credit monitoring services.2 The government is supposed to protect us from scams and deceptive advertising--but under the Trump administration they’re in on the con. In 2017, Equifax announced a data breach that let criminals have access to the personal information of 147 million people--including names, social security numbers, and addresses. Equifax and the Federal Trade Commission reached a settlement for Equifax’s gross negligence that they said included either free credit monitoring for 10 years or a $125 payout to claimants. Last month, the FTC said Equifax would pay at least $575 million (possibly up to $700 million) because of its gross negligence and lack of security measures that led to the breach of customer data.3 But on Wednesday, the FTC announced that there were so many claimants that people wouldn’t receive anything near $125 and urged them to sign up for credit monitoring instead.4 FTC staffer Robert Schoshinski wrote that the "the pot of money that pays for" cash refunds for hardship "is $31 million.”5 As one commenter on the FTC blog said, did the FTC forget to do the math? The data breach affected 147 million people. There is no reasonable explanation for advertising a cash payout of $125 with those numbers.6 Thanks for taking action to protect consumer rights, Salma and the team at Demand Progress
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