|
|
|
|
|
by opendais
4271 days ago
|
|
Read the filing: User contact information – name, address, phone number and email address – and internal JPMorgan Chase information relating to such users have been compromised. The compromised data impacts approximately 76 million households and 7 million small businesses. However, there is no evidence that account information for such affected customers – account numbers, passwords, user IDs, dates of birth or Social Security numbers – was compromised during this attack. http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/19617/000119312514362... |
|
Perhaps someone who has more experience with security and system administration can answer this: If you get root access to a system (as mentioned in the original article), isn't it fairly easy to make it nearly impossible to find evidence that any particular piece of information has been compromised?
It's funny that this wording (there is no evidence) should be used. I don't know if JPMorgan can confidently assert that this information has not been compromised, yet when stated this way it sounds like they are.