New York’s Attorney General filed a lawsuit against National General and its parent Allstate Insurance Co. alleging they have failed to protect New Yorkers’ personal information from cyberattacks.
The suit by Attorney General Letitia James cites incidents in 2020 and 2021, when National General suffered a pair of back-to-back data breaches that exposed the driver’s license numbers of more than 165,000 New Yorkers. The attorney general alleges that following the first breach, National General failed to notify impacted consumers and neglected to determine whether sensitive information was exposed elsewhere in its system, which enabled a second, larger breach months later.
James alleges the two breaches were a result of National General’s failure to implement reasonable data security measures, both before and after Allstate assumed control of its data security operations.
.James is seeking penalties for National General’s failure to institute reasonable data security safeguards and notify consumers, and an injunction to stop any continued violations.
In 2020, attackers began targeting National General’s online quoting websites, which were designed to automatically display consumers’ full driver’s license numbers in plain text, a flaw that bad actors were able to take advantage of to access consumers’ private information.
The first breach, which affected two public-facing websites, exposed the driver’s license numbers of nearly 12,000 individuals, including more than 9,100 New Yorkers. It took National General two months before it detected the breach.
National General then failed to alert the consumers whose data was exposed or notify the appropriate state agencies after the company discovered the breach, according to James.
The lawsuit says the insurer also continued to leave driver’s license numbers exposed on a separate quoting website for independent insurance agents. Attackers then targeted this system in a second, larger breach, which National General detected in February 2021. This attack compromised the personal information of an additional 187,000 consumers, including the driver’s license numbers of roughly 155,000 New Yorkers.
According to the lawsuit, National General’s data security failures continued after Allstate acquired National General and Allstate took control of National General’s data security function. Allstate acquired National General in September 2020 for about $4 billion
James alleges that National General violated state consumer protection and business laws by failing to secure sensitive information, misrepresenting its data security practices to customers and consumers and failing to notify affected consumers of the initial breach.
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Lawsuits
New York
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