×

(KNSI) – In January, a data breach with millions of Americans’ personal information was found on the dark web. A press release from the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office reports the information, names, birthdays, Social Security numbers, and more, was stolen from T-Mobile in August of 2021. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison claims more than 670,000 Minnesotans may be involved in the breach and has joined a coalition of 48 state attorneys general to investigate the crime.

Ellison says the data breach not only affected current T-Mobile customers but past and potential customers who may have given personal information to the company. As a result, he is asking Minnesota residents to take extra steps to protect their personal information. Ellison asks Minnesotans to:

Monitor your credit. Credit-monitoring services track your credit report and alert you whenever a change is made, such as a new account or a large purchase. Most services will notify you within 24 hours of any change to your credit report.

Consider placing a credit freeze on your credit report. Identity thieves will not be able to open a new credit account in your name while the freeze is in place.

Place a fraud alert on your credit report. A fraud alert tells lenders and creditors to take extra steps to verify your identity before issuing credit.

A step-by-step guide to complete these tasks can be found on the Minnesota Attorney General’s Website.

___

Copyright 2022 Leighton Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be broadcast, published, redistributed, or rewritten, in any way without consent.

FOLLOW US FOR INSTANT UPDATES!

FOLLOW US FOR INSTANT UPDATES!

KNSI on Twitter

No feed items available at this time.