Experian did this as well (on a smaller scale) a few years ago. Same response, "sorry about that, we will give you a year of free credit monitoring". When I looked into what they asked for to sign up for "free" credit monitoring, it just looked like another opportunity to have my data hacked from another company. Instead I just froze my credit. The irony is that I had to pay Experian plus the other two big credit companies $10 each to do that. What's wrong with this picture?
John DeSoi, Ph.D. https://www.t-mobile.com/landing/experian-data-breach-faq.html > On Sep 8, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Chip Scheide via 4D_Tech <4d_tech@lists.4d.com> > wrote: > > I find the idea that it is necessary to implement PCI ironic, when > Equifax just lost the SS numbers, and other personal data of over > 140,000,000 people. ********************************************************************** 4D Internet Users Group (4D iNUG) FAQ: http://lists.4d.com/faqnug.html Archive: http://lists.4d.com/archives.html Options: http://lists.4d.com/mailman/options/4d_tech Unsub: mailto:4d_tech-unsubscr...@lists.4d.com **********************************************************************