TransUnion discloses cyberattack impacting 4.4M consumers
Credit bureau TransUnion disclosed Wednesday that a July cyberattack compromised the personal data of more than 4.4 million consumers, according to a filing with the Office of the Maine Attorney General.
In a letter to affected customers, the company stressed that the breach did not involve its core systems or credit files. Instead, hackers gained “unauthorized access to some of your personal data that was stored on a third-party application. Importantly, no credit information was accessed.”
TransUnion did not identify the vendor involved, but a spokesperson sent a statement to HousingWire, saying the company “identified and contained this event within hours.”
“TransUnion recently experienced a cyber incident that affected a third-party application serving our U.S. consumer support operations. Upon discovery, we quickly contained the issue, which did not involve our core credit database or include credit reports,” the statement read.
“The incident involved unauthorized access to limited personal information for a very small percentage of U.S. consumers. We are working with law enforcement and have engaged third party cyber security experts for an independent forensics review. Additionally, we will notify affected consumers and provide credit monitoring services.”
The breach, which happened on July 28, was detected within two days. Nationwide, roughly 4.4 million individuals were affected, including 16,828 in Maine. The company also filed disclosures in California.
TransUnion said the exposed information was limited to “specific data elements” and did not include credit reports or other core credit information.
The Illinois-based bureau is offering affected consumers two years of free credit monitoring through its myTrueIdentity service, as well as fraud assistance.
TransUnion manages more than 1 billion consumer profiles worldwide, including 200 million in the U.S. Roughly one-third of its revenue comes from mortgage companies.
The disclosure comes eight years after rival Equifax revealed a 2017 data breach that potentially compromised the records of 143 million U.S. consumers. The sector remains a prime target for hackers because of the sensitive financial and personal information it holds.
Editor’s note: This story was updated with a statement from TransUnion.
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Stevan Stanisic
Real Estate Advisor | License ID: SL3518131
Real Estate Advisor License ID: SL3518131