TransUnion says hackers stole 4.4 million customers’ personal information

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Credit reporting giant TransUnion has disclosed a data breach affecting more than 4.4 million customers’personal information.

TransUnion says hackers stole 4.4 million customers’personal information

In a filing with Maine’s attorney general’s office on Thursday, TransUnion attributed the July 28 breach to unauthorized access of a third-party application storing customers’personal data for its U.S. consumer support operations.

TransUnion claimed“no credit information was accessed,”but provided no immediate evidence for its claim. The data breach notice did not specify what specific types of personal data were stolen.

When reached by TechCrunch, TransUnion spokesperson Jon Boughtin would not answer questions related to the company’s data breach, or say what types of customers’personally identifiable information were taken.

It’s not clear if the company is yet aware of what data was stolen.

TransUnion is one of the largest credit reporting agencies in the United States, and stores the financial data of more than 260 million Americans. It’s the latest U.S. corporate giant to have been hacked in recent weeks following a wave of hacks targeting the insuranceretail, and transportation and airline industries

Several companies, including Googleinsurance giant Allianz LifeCisco, and HR giant Workday, reported data breaches of customer data stored in their Salesforce-hosted cloud databases. Following its breach, Google attributed the hacks to an extortion group known as ShinyHunters.

It’s not clear who is behind the breach at TransUnion, or if the hackers made any demands to the company.

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