According to them , they just bought a company (to make money so, why bother about securing its data)
According to the article:-
(Experian's Statements below)
No Experian database was accessed (and the company you bought is not Experian?)
Further, Experian’s only involvement was that it purchased the assets of a company, (so, you are not responsible for that company's security , how about the profit it generates?)
Court Ventures was selling the data in question to the criminal for over a year before Experian acquired (So, you did not bother checking)
Furthermore, any implication that there was a breach of 200 million records is entirely false and misleading – while the size of the database may be 200 million, that does not mean the total number of records were accessed. (do you have any proof ?)
Lastly, Experian discontinued the sales of this data immediately upon learning of the problem and worked closely with law enforcement to bring this criminal to justice (were you doing a favor? or did you have a choice NOT to do it?)
The link below has more information:-
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