Home News Chief Information Security Officer and Chief Security Officer are going to leave Equifax this friday

Chief Information Security Officer and Chief Security Officer are going to leave Equifax this friday

by Harikrishna Mekala

In response to a News request, the organization said Susan Mauldin is leaving as chief security officer and Dave Webb is leaving as chief information officer.

A LinkedIn profile for Susan M. says she’s worked in the CSO role since 2013. She previously served at First Data Corporation, Sun Trust Banks, and HP. She read music in college and earned her MFA from the University of Georgia.

Webb entered Equifax in 2010, according to his business bio. He earlier served as chief operations officer at Silicon Valley Bank and as a vice chairman at Goldman Sachs. Before getting his MBA, Webb earned a bachelor’s degree in Russian from the University of London.

Last week, the credit monitoring firm announced that a security breach may become exposed the personal data of up to 143 million Americans. The vulnerable information comprises names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses and some driver’s license numbers.

Equifax is presently under examination by the FBI and the Federal Trade Commission. The state lawyer general of Massachusetts has said she expects to sue the company. Class action suits are also pouring in.

Representative Jeb Hensarling, a Republican from Texas and chair of the House Financial Services Committee, has said education for a congressional conference on the hack are underway as well.

The company said Friday that its internal research is “still ongoing,” and that the company “remains to work closely with the FBI in its investigation.”

The breach happened between mid-May and July, according to Equifax. The organization said it discovered the hack on July 29, but only gained that fact public last week.

Equifax’s subsequent response has come under fire.

Initially, the organization required those who signed up for its credit monitoring to give up any of their rights to sue. And the firm has been heavy to keep those affected in Britain and Canada in the loop.

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