Multiple class-action lawsuits have already been launched in the United States following the massive data breaches and exploitation related to Fortra’s GoAnywhere MFT file transfer software in January.
Now those lawsuits may be piling up north of the border. A law firm in Saskatchewan, Canada — Merchant Law Group — has launched a nationwide class action suit. The claimants are Canadian investors in Mackenzie Financial who allege their personal information was compromised in a hack linked to GoAnywhere.
The defendants in this case include Mackenzie Financial and Edward Jones; Investor.com, a company responsible for managing information provided to clients of investment firms; and Fortra.
For a class action suit to move forward, it needs the approval of a judge.
The lawsuit brought forth on behalf of Mackenzie investors residing in B.C., Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Newfoundland and Labrador, asserts that Mackenzie and Edward Jones enlisted the services of Investor.com for data transfer. This included the exchange of personal and financial details between employees and partners. Investor.com and Edward Jones purportedly utilized the cloud version of GoAnwhere (named GoAnywhere MFTaaS) for this purpose.
According to the lawsuit, hackers took advantage of a zero-day flaw in GoAnywhere MFTaaS in late January. This allowed them to set up unauthorized accounts in the systems of certain public and private sector clients and proceed to duplicate data. Fortra confirmed this incident in a public statement later.
On March 28, Investor.com allegedly informed Mackenzie and Edward Jones about the breach in GoAnywhere MFTaaS and revealed that names, addresses, and Social Insurance numbers of Mackenzie’s customers had been exposed.
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