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Senate rewards Equifax despite privacy breaches


From: Richard Forno <rforno () infowarrior org>
Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2018 06:50:14 -0400

(Congress, again doing what it does best -- the unadulterated display of self-serving idiocy and promoting the utter 
abrogation of responsibility for damages to the American people in the pursuit of profits.  --rick)

Senate banking bill rewards Equifax despite privacy breaches

Newly released provisions would allow the company and its industry peers to enter the mortgage market while shielding 
them from consumer lawsuits.

By ZACHARY WARMBRODT

03/12/2018 07:09 PM EDT

Equifax’s role in the biggest consumer data breach in U.S. history isn’t stopping Congress from giving the giant credit 
reporting company sweeping protection from lawsuits while allowing it to expand its offerings into the mortgage 
business.

Those favors for Equifax and its peers in the credit reporting industry are among the surprise provisions in a major 
banking and financial deregulation bill that the Senate is set to pass this week.

The changes, made public only last Wednesday, are providing new ammunition to critics of the banking legislation, which 
would scale back regulations imposed after the 2008 financial crisis. Congress has yet to pass any laws creating 
stiffer penalties for companies like Equifax, whose security practices allowed hackers to steal highly sensitive data 
on as many as 148 million U.S. customers last year.

"This is the credit reporting agencies, one of whom caused more than half of the U.S. adult population to get hacked 
and to have their Social Security numbers in the hands of thieves," National Consumer Law Center staff attorney Chi Chi 
Wu said. "They really should not have that political clout right now."

The Senate is on track to pass the banking legislation around the middle of this week after a procedural vote Monday 
evening. The credit-reporting issues could remain in play when the House takes up the bill.

On the surface, the bill appears to impose a large burden on Equifax, TransUnion and Experian, which would be required 
for the first time to provide free credit freezes for consumers and free credit monitoring for members of the military.

But lobbyists for the companies quietly prevailed in a months-long fight to secure language that would shield the firms 
from consumer lawsuits stemming from the free credit monitoring requirement. Another add-on — which could have a 
considerable impact on the housing market — could give a joint venture operated by the three companies an entry into 
providing credit scores for aspiring homeowners applying for mortgages.

< - >

https://www.politico.com/story/2018/03/12/equifax-data-breach-banking-profits-405457
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