TD Ameritrade Close To Settling notes-Theft Lawsuit
Online brokerage TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. is close to settling a class-action lawsuit by the theft of contact data for more than 6 million customers.
As part of a proposed settlement, Ameritrade agreed to pay nearly $1.9 million in legal fees and cover the cost of one year of anti-spam service for the victims. Ameritrade additionally promised to better protect customer notes.
The settlement’s terms could change. U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker in San Francisco rejected the proposed settlement until he knew more about the basis for the amount of legal fees and about the value of what Ameritrade’s customers would receive.
“I think that is an extremely good settlement for the class,” said lawyer Scott A. Kamber, who filed one of the two lawsuits that were combined into the class action. “This is a model of a consumer settlement which has benefits for the class as well as the company.”
The lawyers for the other plaintiffs did not
Anyone who held an Ameritrade history or provided an e-mail address to the company before Sept. 14 could benefit from the lawsuit. The database that was hacked included info on 6.2 million humans.
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit said they received unwanted e-mail ads about positive stocks. The ads arised to be designed to manipulate the value of thinly traded stocks.
Ameritrade spokeswoman Kim Hillyer said no cases of identity theft have been linked to the info theft, which was revealed last September.
Ameritrade hired ID Analytics Inc., which has expertise in identity theft, to help investigate. ID Analytics checked Ameritrade’s customer notes against other databases three times and found no evidence of organized identity theft.
“We believe that the settlement is fair, it’s fair, and it provides a lot of benefits to public in the class to help them with the issue…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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