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People are taking Equifax to small-claims court via chatbot — and winning

Posted on February 1, 2018 by Dissent
Screenshot by DataBreaches.net

Ethan Wolff-Mann reports:

In September, entrepreneur Joshua Browder’s Do Not Pay chatbot website added a new skill: allowing people to sue Equifax for its monumental data breach that exposed the personal information of 145.5 million people, which included Social Security numbers.

A few months later, the results are coming in and people are winning judgements approaching $10,000.

Yahoo Finance spoke to a few consumers who have taken on Equifax in small claims courts, a process that they found surprisingly smooth, with no need for lawyers.

“It was the easiest nine grand I ever made,” said Darrow B. of San Francisco, who just won a judgment of $9,100.

Read more on Yahoo!

Related posts:

  • TeamGhostShell posts “master list” of 548 leaks (so far)
  • Equifax Reaches $1.4 Billion Data Breach Settlement in Consumer Class Action; Also Agrees to Pay $575 Million as Part of Settlement with FTC, CFPB, and States Related to 2017 Data Breach
  • 500 million Yahoo accounts breached; biggest breach ever publicly disclosed
  • Equifax data breach aftermath: lawsuits and criticism mount, stock prices plummet (Updates)
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