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Did anyone actually receive a payout from this? How is the credit monitoring via experian?
@Bees18 wrote:Did anyone actually receive a payout from this? How is the credit monitoring via experian?
Payouts and monitoring won't be sent before the 22nd this month.
@Anonymous wrote:
@Bees18 wrote:Did anyone actually receive a payout from this? How is the credit monitoring via experian?
Payouts and monitoring won't be sent before the 22nd this month.
After expenses will the true victims actually receive any benefits? Seems attorneys and OTHERS benefit not the victims?
I forgot about this...never did anything. Missed the free credit monitoring.
@CreditInspired wrote:
With all the horror stories I’ve read on here about Equifax—difficult to reach a human, freezing/unlocking problems, ID verification, and of course the breach itself—no way in hell was I subjecting myself to their free credit monitoring!
It's not through them, it's through Experian.
@Anonymous wrote:
@CreditInspired wrote:
With all the horror stories I’ve read on here about Equifax—difficult to reach a human, freezing/unlocking problems, ID verification, and of course the breach itself—no way in hell was I subjecting myself to their free credit monitoring!It's not through them, it's through Experian.
For the Equifax breach? I'm confused but wasn't that through Equifax?
The recent Yahoo one I think is Experian... and I pay for their service anyway. I'm not even going to be sending in the form. Out of all the free services I still think Credit Karma is the best one FWIW anything above that is irrelevant though I know I'm in the incredibly tiny minority of the consumer population.
There's been so many recently I can't keep them straight
@Revelate wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
@CreditInspired wrote:
With all the horror stories I’ve read on here about Equifax—difficult to reach a human, freezing/unlocking problems, ID verification, and of course the breach itself—no way in hell was I subjecting myself to their free credit monitoring!It's not through them, it's through Experian.
For the Equifax breach? I'm confused but wasn't that through Equifax?
The recent Yahoo one I think is Experian... and I pay for their service anyway. I'm not even going to be sending in the form. Out of all the free services I still think Credit Karma is the best one FWIW anything above that is irrelevant though I know I'm in the incredibly tiny minority of the consumer population.
There's been so many recently I can't keep them straight
For some reason I'm getting 6 free credit reports from Equifax per year. I just found that out a few days ago. But @Revelate the only thing that I really like about the report is it gives you a past with current list of Soft Pulls. That just seems golden for some reason. CK is the Go-To freebie for sure and Exp.'s freebie is good to get but Credit.com (Exp. vant) keeps up too.
@Revelate wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
@CreditInspired wrote:
With all the horror stories I’ve read on here about Equifax—difficult to reach a human, freezing/unlocking problems, ID verification, and of course the breach itself—no way in hell was I subjecting myself to their free credit monitoring!It's not through them, it's through Experian.
For the Equifax breach? I'm confused but wasn't that through Equifax?
The recent Yahoo one I think is Experian... and I pay for their service anyway. I'm not even going to be sending in the form. Out of all the free services I still think Credit Karma is the best one FWIW anything above that is irrelevant though I know I'm in the incredibly tiny minority of the consumer population.
There's been so many recently I can't keep them straight
The credit monitoring for the Equifax breach is provided by Experian for the first 4 years and extended monitoring is offered by Equifax.
"Settlement Benefit: Credit Monitoring Services: The Settlement provides a way to help protect yourself from unauthorized use of your personal information. Settlement Class Members may submit a claim to enroll in at least four (4) years of three-bureau credit monitoring services, provided by Experian, at no cost."
"If you submitted a valid claim and enrolled in Credit Monitoring Services, you could elect to enroll in up to six (6) years of one-bureau credit monitoring services provided by Equifax that would begin after the three-bureau Credit Monitoring Services expire."