Cybersecurity Breach: MOVEit costs N.S. taxpayers more than $3 million; personal info from thousands still at risk
CTV
N.S. MOVEit cyber hack price tag $2.85 million for credit monitoring services alone.
More than 165,000 letters have been sent to Nova Scotians caught up in the MOVEit global cybersecurity breach.
The breach took place between May 30 and May 31, and was first reported by the Nova Scotia government a few days later.
The province says $2.85 million has been spent so far for credit monitoring services related to the online hack.
That is in addition to the $240,000 paid by Nova Scotia to IBM following the breach for incident response support.
IBM remains on retainer, which costs $5,600 a month to ensure that they're available immediately if needed.
In a news release Thursday, Nova Scotia’s Cyber Security and Digital Solutions Minister Colton LeBlanc said once the province discovered the breach, the goal was to notify those impacted as quickly as possible so they could take steps to protect their identity.
“We've now finished that process," said LeBlanc. "Now, we can turn our focus to setting out the lessons we've learned and ensuring departments are doing what they need to do to keep Nova Scotians' personal information safe.”