School Nutrition Vendor Sued for Compromise of 867,209 K-12 Student Records | Robinson+Cole Data Privacy + Security Insider - JDSupra
School Nutrition Vendor Sued for Compromise of 867,209 K-12 Student Records
PCS Revenue Control Systems, Inc. (PCS) was hit with a proposed class action lawsuit last week alleging that it discovered a data breach from a hacking attack in December 2019 but failed to notify the affected students until March of 2021.
According to the lawsuit, student information was collected by PCS’s predecessor, Advanced Business Technologies (ABT), which provided food, nutrition, and technology services for K-12 schools. The information alleged to have been collected by ABT and in the possession of PCS after the acquisition included the names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and student identification numbers of 867,209 students who attended K-12 schools in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Texas. It is unclear why a nutrition vendor needs Social Security numbers of students to provide services.
Although the incident was allegedly discovered in December 2019, PCS sent notification letters to affected students and parents only in March 2021, offering one year of free credit monitoring.
PCS Revenue Control Systems, Inc. (PCS) was hit with a proposed class action lawsuit last week alleging that it discovered a data breach from a hacking attack in December 2019 but failed to notify the affected students until March of 2021.
According to the lawsuit, student information was collected by PCS’s predecessor, Advanced Business Technologies (ABT), which provided food, nutrition, and technology services for K-12 schools. The information alleged to have been collected by ABT and in the possession of PCS after the acquisition included the names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and student identification numbers of 867,209 students who attended K-12 schools in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Texas. It is unclear why a nutrition vendor needs Social Security numbers of students to provide services.
Although the incident was allegedly discovered in December 2019, PCS sent notification letters to affected students and parents only in March 2021, offering one year of free credit monitoring.