Equifax must pay $725,000 as part of a settlement with the state after a coding error in 2022 led to the inaccurate lowering of some New Yorkers' credit scores.
The New York Attorney General announced a settlement with Equifax over inaccuracies in credit scores for New Yorkers. This issue affected about 77,000 residents due to a coding mistake, according to ...
Shares of Experian PLC EXPN inched up 0.67% to £34.55 Tuesday, on what proved to be an all-around rough trading session for ...
The rule ends the inclusion of medical debt on credit reports and prevents lenders from using certain medical information in ...
Nielsen's Matt Devitt, head of advertisers and agencies, discusses the biggest changes in how advertisers and agencies are ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has finalized a rule to keep medical bills off of consumers’ credit reports.
Living isn't easy, and it's most certainly not cheap. For many Americans, living paycheck to paycheck is the norm -- a strain ...
The South Carolina Department of Consumer Affairs is reminding parents of ways to protect their child's information following ...
Credit and debit card skimming usually occurs at ATMs, gas stations and stores, according to the FBI. The illegal activity usually involves someone installing an “undetectable device” on or near an ...
While AI chatbots can provide detailed financial support, their tendency to hallucinate and a lack of guardrails is raising ...
If you recently got a text message trying to collect money for outstanding parking tickets in Williamstown, it's a scam, town ...
Lenders will no longer be able to consider unpaid medical bills as a credit history factor when they evaluate potential ...