Here are some steps that Equifax should have taken: The CEO should have made sure that the Apache software was updated when they notified the company of the new patch that would secure important consumer data. His position requires him to monitor all operations of the company and make sure everything is running smoothly and properly. The CEO should not have placed all of the blame on one IT employee. Smith told the public that the employee did not install the patch when he/she should have. The public was not pleased with this answer, nor did they believe it. Equifax should have informed authorities and the public as soon as they discovered the breach. Not wait 6 weeks and then decide to tell them. The company should have been transparent with their customers. The breach caused mistrust as it is. Withholding something this important from the public hurts the relationship that Equifax has with its customers even more. Equifax should have fired their CEO befor...
Overall, reporters, public officials, and bloggers are blaming Equifax for the breach and are quite angry with the company. The Los Angeles Times published an article that stated, "Equifax basically left all our data out on the lawn for anyone to walk off with - the upshot of failing to encrypt the databases that store some of the most sensitive details of our lives" (Lazarus, 2020). The breach wouldn't have happened if Equifax had installed the update and kept its guard up. The attackers used encryptions to go unnoticed while accessing the data but Equifax never thought to encrypt the data in order to protect customer's sensitive information. The author suggests that other companies such as, Google and Amazon, are not encrypting their data either and they should be. Lawmakers should step in and force the companies to encrypt all customer records. There should be fixed penalties for any breach. I think that this might be a good idea even though it will be costly for...