ChoicePoint says data theft cost it $6M
The money went to legal expenses and other fees
July 21, 2005 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Credit and personal information vendor ChoicePoint Inc. took a $6 million charge in its second quarter, which ended June 30, citing costs associated with the theft of personal information on 145,000 consumers, the company said yesterday.
The $6 million was used for legal expenses and other professional fees related to the data theft, Alpharetta, Ga.-based ChoicePoint said in a statement.
The second-quarter charge came on top of a $5.4 million charge the company had to take in the first quarter related to the same incident. That first-quarter expense included $2 million spent on communications to the affected consumers and for providing those people with credit reports and credit monitoring services. Approximately $3.4 million went for legal and professional fees, ChoicePoint said.
ChoicePoint provides data to credit providers, government agencies, landlords and others who use personal information to approve loans, leases and other contracts.
In February, ChoicePoint said the data theft occurred when "a small number of very well-organized criminals posed as legitimate companies to gain access to personal information about consumers." (see "State officials push ChoicePoint on ID theft notifications").
Information provided by ChoicePoint has since been used in about 750 identity-theft scams, according to the company.
"It's becoming more expensive [to handle these security breaches], and the reason it's becoming more expensive recently is because of the new notification laws," said James Van Dyke, principal analyst at Javelin Strategy & Research, a Pleasanton, Calif., financial consulting firm. "So we have every reason to believe that data breaches like that at ChoicePoint, sadly, have actually been going on for longer than most people realize....
"It's laws such as those in the state of California and other parts of the U.S., requiring new notification, that are bringing these cases to light," Van Dyke said. "ChoicePoint happened to be the first big one after these notification laws [went into effect]. We'll see investments like that of ChoicePoint as these companies seek to avoid the kind of a death sentence CardSystems received from American Express and Visa. Companies like ChoicePoint will spend this money on public relations, procedures and on partner relations."
Earlier this week, Visa U.S.A. Inc. and American Express Co. said separately that they are terminating contracts with CardSystems Solutions Inc., a credit card transaction-processing company that was hit by hacker attacks, potentially exposing 40 million card numbers to online intruders.
The companies said CardSystems, in Atlanta, didn't meet contractual requirements in providing processing services for merchants that accept the credit cards. As a result, they will no longer allow CardSystems to
Additional Resources


White Papers & Webcasts
Centralized Data Backup and Your WAN
Is your organization prepared to tackle the massive challenge of protecting your data in a cost effective and timely manner? With a growing...
Why Compliance Pays
This OnDemand webcast explores the relationship that firms with best compliance records have higher revenue, greater customer retention, lower financial losses from data...
An All-in-One Approach to Web Security
Granting web access to employees poses challenges to IT administrators and introduces unique security risks. Even as companies have perfected their security techniques...
Best Practices for Managing Business Risks from the Use of IT
(Source: Symantec) Based on exhaustive benchmarks conducted by the IT Policy Compliance, this session highlights the relationship between business risks and use of...
The Hidden Dangers of Spam
Beyond the well-understood productivity drain that spam inflicts on businesses, threats posed by illicit email circulating through a network are causing many security...
Managing And Protecting Your Ever Increasing Mobile Assets
(Source: Absolute Software) Your users are becoming more mobile each day. This is great for productivity - yet challenging for IT control. Natalie...
Open Source Security Myths Dispelled
(Source: Astaro) Open Source Software is computer software whose source code is available to the general public. This openly viewable nature...
Sun OpenSSO Enterprise Webinar
(Source: Sun) This webinar replay discusses Sun OpenSSO Enterprise innovation--the single, open-source solution that helps your business solve the challenges around internal access...
Best Practices for Backing Up VMware® with Veritas NetBackup™
VMware® is used by enterprises large and small to increase the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of their IT operations. With this in mind, Symantec...
Agile Enterprise Content Management (ECM) for Rapid ROI
(Source: IBM) Content rich business processes are a core feature of daily operations at just about any organization today. Very often these essential...
Subscribe to Computerworld
