Nova Scotia Power says it’s now offering five years of free credit monitoring to all its customers, past and present, including those who didn’t get a letter saying their personal information was stolen in a ransomware attack.
The company says it’s discovered through its investigation the personal information of former customers was also accessed on or around March 19th and later stolen by a third party.
NSP says it’s working to determine the full scope of data that may be affected.
It says it can’t rule out the possibility the list includes name, phone number, email address, mailing and service addresses, date of birth, customer account history and driver’s license number.