In December 2017, the company announced that its systems were compromised the day before with an “unauthorized person(s) gaining access to the personal information of some customers that have financed their vehicles".
1.13 million customers were affected and the exposed data included customer names, addresses, vehicle makes and models, vehicle identification numbers (VINs), credit scores, loan amounts and monthly payment figures. The exposed data did not include personal banking information.
As part of their incident response, the company offered 12 months of free credit monitoring to its customers.
Want to discuss this case? You can purchase a 30 minute conference call with our analysts to discuss this case and the implications it has for your organisation. Just select the time and date that works for you:
We've done the analysis so you can make the decisions