The hacking group usdod claimed it had stolen personal records, including social security info, of 2.9 billion people from national public data. Here are steps you can take to see if your information was stolen and then what to do if your social security number and other personal data were leaked in the massive data hack. A class action lawsuit has brought attention to an alleged hack of a data broker and a dataset that contains personal information, including social security numbers. What to know about the latest social security number breach hackers may have gained access to the private information of millions of people from a background check company called national public data. Hackers just leaked a bunch of social security numbers Here's what to know initial reports said hackers stole over 2.9 billion data entries.
After the confirmation of a significant data breach, here is how to know if your social security number has been compromised and how to protect your information. In an epic data breach, hackers claim to have taken 2.9 billion personal records from national public data Most of the data are leaked online. A viral but unsubstantiated claim that nearly every american had their social security number (ssn) leaked in a massive data breach spread like wildfire this week, stemming from the alleged hack. Two cybersecurity firms launch separate websites that can tell you if your personal information, including social security number, was exposed in the national public data breach.
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