The names, addresses, social security numbers and, in some cases, credit card details of approximately 143 million Americans were accessed during the attack - nearly half of the US Image Manipulation population. Reports would later reveal that the attackers managed to gain access to Equifax's systems by exploiting a vulnerability that had in fact been identified Image Manipulation in March, one that Equifax could have easily secured.
The true extent of the damage has yet to be fully determined at the time of this writing, and according to John Ulzheimer, credit monitoring expert and former Image Manipulation Equifax employee, “there may never be way to find out. At this point, it's unclear whether Equifax will face any significant consequences for its utter failure to protect the digital identities of half the BV Image Manipulation American population. (To add insult to injury, it appears Equifax not only waited six weeks to report the breach, but further delayed informing the public until it had successfully acquired a company. identity Image Manipulation protection so that she can later profit from the breach.) If this situation had played out in Europe, things would probably be very different. Europeans (and the European Union in particular) care Image Manipulation a lot about online privacy and data protection.
From 'controversial' laws that protect Europeans' 'right to be forgotten' to wider cultural attitudes about consumer protection, it's much easier - and safer - to be Image Manipulation a consumer in Europe than in the states -United. For American companies marketing to European consumers, however, life could soon become much more difficult thanks to the European Image Manipulation Union's General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR ( PDF of full text ).