As America's corporate embodiment of negligence and Taste of Secret Sexgreed, Equifax has gone to great lengths to solidify its place as one of the world's most hated companies. But that's all about to change, dear friends and neighbors, because the corporation that lost the personal information of potentially 143 million individuals to hackers are about to be here for you in a big way.
And just how, exactly, will a company that couldn't patch a known vulnerability get back in your good graces? Drumroll please...with an app.
SEE ALSO: Twitter is *not having* Equifax's response to that massive hackThat's right, during a Wednesday hearing held by the Senate Commerce Committee, interim CEO Paulino do Rego Barros Jr. told those gathered that his company is making an app. You know, for security and stuff.
"The product is being developed as we speak — we are on time to deliver this in January," noted Barros. "We just started our development tests now," he added.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As Silicon Valley has repeatedly shown, whether it be for finding a toilet, scanning your dick pics, or getting strangers to buy you milk, apps are always great ideas providing much needed solutions to heretofore seemingly intractable problems. Equifax, it appears, wants in.
And we're sure the company will hire developers that put a priority on protecting user data. No doubt there. Because, for the app to do anything at all related to your credit, it's definitely going to need some of your personal information. And we know Equifax is to be trusted in this department.
But just what, you ask, will the app do? In the hearing, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, noted that this mythical piece of software would "allow consumers to lock and unlock personal credit data," but at present that's really all we know.
We reached out to Equifax with a host of questions but, sadly, received no response as of press time. We imagine the company's representatives were too busy changing all their passwords to "admin" to get back to us. Or, if not that, possibly they stepped away from their inboxes in order to direct worried hack victims to a fake Equifax site.
Either way, everyone at the company is clearly busy. Hopefully, they're putting that collective brain power into the to-be-released mobile product. If their previous app — which also allowed users to "Lock and unlock [their] Equifax credit file" — is any indication, things should turn out fine.
And by "fine," of course, we mean fine for Equifax. Everyone else will, once again, surely end up screwed.
Topics Apps & Software Cybersecurity
Previous:Walking Away from Omelas
Everything we know about the OnePlus 6THuawei’s recent cheating wont help it win over AmericansNokia might be working on a phone with five rear camerasBurt Reynolds dies at 82'Pokémon Go' is already the biggest U.S. mobile game everMichael B. Jordan and Warner Bros. parent company partner for diversity and inclusion initiativeLet Jenna Fischer make your day with a precious throwback pic from 'The Office'Auschwitz asks visitors not to play 'Pokémon Go'Introducing SpiderRyan Reynolds and Paddington are in the middle of a brutal Twitter feudBBC is really getting into 'slow radio' with a dedicated programSerena Williams is sticking it to her wardrobe shamers with this cute pic of her daughterLos Angeles officers cleared in shooting death of Redel JonesEverything we know about the OnePlus 6T'The Chris Gethard Show' is weird and wild. Watch it now.Rescue puppy's delightfully weird portraits scream 'adopt me'Nike reveals inspiring new ad narrated by Colin KaepernickThe FBI has quietly gathered 400,000 iris scansBurt Reynolds dies at 82Snap's new Spectacles look way less dorky Hands on with Polaroid's OneStep+ instant camera with app connectivity Teen discovers body in river while playing 'Pokémon Go' Hands on with the redesigned Wear OS by Google for smartwatches Producer says NBC tried to kill Ronan Farrow's Harvey Weinstein story Eminem just dropped a surprise album called 'Kamikaze' and people are into it Huawei says its new smartphone chip is faster than Snapdragon in almost every way West Bengal asks colleges to have separate toilets for transgenders Lenovo's new Yoga Book is fun, but don't think of it as a laptop State Department reopens the probe into Hillary Clinton's emails 'Castle Rock' went full Stephen King with one great 'The Shining' reference Stormzy encourages the UK not to ignore U.S. police violence George Takei isn't supportive of the new twist that Sulu is gay Minnesota governor says racism played a part in fatal police shooting Our first look at the flagship 2018 iPhones is here 'Mr. Robot' to end run after upcoming fourth season Riot Games is ready to explain how it's going to end its 'bro culture' Emmy Rossum announces exit from 'Shameless' Snoop Dogg, the Game lead march to LAPD headquarters Turns out, not many people change their minds because of something they see on social media Bang and Olufsen's new wheel
2.3474s , 10130.6171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Taste of Secret Sex】,Unobstructed Information Network