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Author Topic: Equifax Data Breach & BTC Discussion  (Read 260 times)
OROBTC (OP)
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September 18, 2017, 03:41:47 PM
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...

I don't have the information handy (links) to do a "Security Freeze" (lock your credit information from any Equifax, Experian and TransUnion customers checking your credit), but below I do provide mailing addresses (we started the process to freeze all three of our accounts Friday and Saturday).  Nor do I have their 800 numbers.  The companies are making it HARD to freeze your accounts...

I am interested in your comments on how the data breach will affect BTC prices (my guess is it will encourage more people to get into the Bitcoin Ecosystem).  What say you all?

*   *   *

Addresses by regular mail (all three companies would not allow me into their online ways to freeze, probably overloaded their computers):

Equifax Security Freeze
P. O. Box 105788
Atlanta, GA  30348

Experian Security Freeze
P. O. Box 9554
Allen, TX  75013

TransUnion LLC
P. O. Box 2000
Chester, PA  19016

All three have extensive documentation requirements and in most states they charge ($10 per freeze per company in my state, so that would be $60 to freeze them all for a married couple, highly recommended).

My bank recommended that anyone at "high risk" of Identity Theft freeze the accounts...


EDIT:

Anyone interested in joining a lawsuit I am exploring with a lawyer I know please PM me with any interest.  Note that I cannot guarantee that I can answer if overwhelmed....

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September 20, 2017, 11:33:50 PM
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I think it is a shame that almost all americans were hacked with this. I did some research online but it seems that credit monitoring companies dont really help and the only thing to do is like you say place a freeze on your credit.
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September 20, 2017, 11:40:49 PM
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I think it is a shame that almost all americans were hacked with this. I did some research online but it seems that credit monitoring companies dont really help and the only thing to do is like you say place a freeze on your credit.

Not just a majority of Americans. A majority of Britons were compromised by this attack as well, as well as others. This is the problem with mass centralization of data. Who the hell thought permanently binding a unique plaintext number to each citizen was a good idea?

Financial institutions pass around our most personal information everyday like nothing. And when one of them screws up like this? You're not getting assigned a new social security number, I know that much.....

I haven't been notified about being compromised yet. I can't tell if that means that Equifax isn't notifying people, as required by law, or if I am in the clear for now.
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