An October data breach in a Nationwide Insurance computer network resulted in personal information for thousands of Washingtonians being stolen, according to company officials.
"On October 3, 2012, a portion of our computer network that is used by Nationwide Insurance and Allied Insurance was criminally intruded upon by an unidentified perpetrator. We discovered the attack that day, and took immediate steps to contain the intrusion," Nationwide attorney Samuel Lee notified our office recently.
The company has said that more than 1.1 million people's personal information may have been affected. Some of them are not Nationwide customers. Apparently, some people who might have just gotten quotes, etc. are on the list of those who may have been affected. We've been contacted by some of these people, and since they're not Nationwide customers, they initially think the letter is some kind of scam or sales pitch for ID theft services.
"Although we are still investigating the incident, our initial analysis has indicated that the compromised information included individuals’ name and some combination of their Social Security number, driver’s license number and/or their date of birth and possibly their marital status, gender, and occupation, and the name and address of their employer," Lee wrote.
The attack was reported to law enforcement, including the FBI, who are investigating. Nationwide is sending notification letters to 20,916 people whose personal information may have been compromised. The company says it is tightening network security. It is also offering a year of free credit monitoring and identity theft protection services to those 20,916 people.
In the letter being sent out, the company apologizes for the data breach and says "we are not aware of any misuse of your information at this time."
Nationwide customers should watch for a letter in the mail, or they can call a special hotline the company has set up: 1-800-760-1125.
The state attorney general's office also maintains an excellent page with detailed tips on preventing and dealing with identity theft.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2012
(256)
-
▼
December
(18)
- Insurance statistics in Washington state
- Aetna fined $1 million for insurance violations
- Yak insurance vs. yakking about insurance
- Order approving Amerigroup WA acquisition by WellP...
- Buried Deep Within The Law
- R in Insurance Conference, London, 15 July 2013
- Now I see it! K-means cluster analysis in R
- High wind warning in south Puget Sound -- gusts up...
- Hole-in-one golf insurer extradited to face felony...
- Job opening: .NET developer
- Guilty plea from man who hit car, then bought insu...
- Job opening: Market analyst
- Comparing regions: maps, cartograms and tree maps
- Coming soon: Our revamped website
- Still Stuck Inside
- 20,000 Washingtonians potentially affected by data...
- Think you have flood insurance? Make sure.
- Changing colours and legends in lattice plots
-
▼
December
(18)
Popular Posts
-
Before we get started, this is the one hundredth post of this blog. It started in February 2009 as one of my leadership tasks as president o...
-
Earlier this month, the Washington Healthplanfinder (our state's health insurance exchange) opened its toll-free hotline to start answe...
-
I broke the news to Evelyn. My aunt, Jean Davis, died early Saturday morning. It was my duty to call all of her friends, make the final arra...
-
Version 0.1.6 of the ChainLadder package has been released and is already available from CRAN . The new version adds the function CLFMdelta...