1.4M Illinois job seekers may have had personal data hacked

About 1.4 million job seekers in Illinois may have had their personal information compromised when one of the state's employment security agency vendors was hacked, the governor's office said Friday.

The hacker may have accessed the names, Social Security numbers and birthdates of in the vendor's database. The Illinois Department of Employment Security notified the state's General Assembly about the hack, Gov. Bruce Rauner's administration said.

Authorities say the data break may have impacted 10 states. Others affected are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Oklahoma and Vermont

The agency says the vendor, America's Job Link—Technical Support, learned about the hack on March 14. The Topeka, Kansas-based company alerted the FBI.

Bridget Patton, spokeswoman for the FBI in Kansas City, Missouri, confirmed the company contacted and the office is "working with them on this matter." She declined to elaborate.

Illinois officials say the hack wasn't a result of deficient state software. A state technical team is working with the agency and vendor on the situation.

The Department of Employment Security is preparing notices to those affected.

© 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Citation: 1.4M Illinois job seekers may have had personal data hacked (2017, March 24) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-03-14m-illinois-job-seekers-personal.html
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