Townhall Celebrates America 250
Chip Away at Birthright Citizenship Until We Can Finish It Off Entirely
New Fed Report Shows How Joe Biden's Illegal Alien Invasion Brutalized Our Economy
Watch Doug Burgum Deliver a Brutal Reality Check to CNN Regarding the Reflecting...
The Reactions to FIFA Getting the Trump Card on Folarin Balogun's Red Card...
Are Michigan Democrats About to Nominate a Monster for Senate?
Ketanji Brown Jackson Hits the Front Page of Essence Magazine, and Check Out...
The LGBTQ Movement Just Found Out How Islamic Nations Actually Feel About Them
Murdering the Goose That Lays the Golden Eggs
The People Who Enable Men in Women’s Sports
Happy Independence Day, America, Courtesy of the Chinese Communist Party
Absent 250th 'Celebrities' Did Not “Punish” Trump—They Dishonored Our History
GOP Base Is Disgusted With Do-Nothing Congress
Donald Trump Just Saved US Soccer
Scattered Spider Suspect Extradited From Finland Over $100 Million Hacking Scheme
OPINION

Warren's Regulatory Expansion Is Wrong Answer to Equifax Breach

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Warren's Regulatory Expansion Is Wrong Answer to Equifax Breach

In September, we learned that Equifax had suffered a massive data breach that exposed the personal information -- including names, addresses, birthdates and Social Security numbers -- of 145 million Americans. It was the latest in a string of cybersecurity breaches in recent years. The frequency of such attacks -- with other prominent examples including breaches of systems belonging to Target, eBay, Yahoo and Home Depot -- demonstrates the complexity of securing sensitive information in the internet age.

Advertisement

If there's one thing that all these breaches have taught us, it's that cybersecurity is hard. There's no easy legislative fix, and knee-jerk calls for new regulations on each industry that suffers from a breach offer no substitute for improving cybersecurity.

Nevertheless, a mere week after the Equifax breach, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., had the issue all sorted out. She introduced her legislative remedy, the Freedom from Equifax Exploitation, or FREE, Act, claiming that it "is a first step toward reforming the broken credit reporting industry."

The implication is that this incident is unique among all other cybersecurity breaches in that Equifax and the credit industry at large are the source of the problem. The truth is much more mundane. Equifax fell victim to an unpatched vulnerability installed by a contractor, and now a politician is exploiting the issue to increase government control over an industry.

This is not to say that Equifax deserves no blame. Quite the contrary. Not only was its response after the incident widely condemned as ham-fisted but also the vulnerability itself was disclosed months before the attack and should have been patched. But that kind of mistake is quite common, and the FREE Act would do nothing to fix it.

Instead, Warren focuses on promoting credit freezes by forcing credit reporting agencies to offer the service free of charge. That is troubling because it would be far too easy for consumers to get in the habit of using government to force businesses to provide useful services free. In addition, there is danger in the over-promotion of credit freezes, which, though a useful tool for consumers, come with the potential for economic downsides.

Advertisement

Consumer access to credit is important to the functioning of the economy, and the credit reporting industry plays a vital role. Without the information and the assurance that it provides to lenders, all but the most obviously dependable would find their access to credit considerably curtailed. Everything from buying a home or car to opening a store credit card would become much more difficult without access to the information provided by the credit reporting industry. Even those trying to register on the Obamacare exchanges are finding it much more difficult if they have frozen their credit.

Even if freezes wouldn't be more widely used or prove terribly disruptive, the new regulations would add friction at a key juncture of the economy. There are valid reasons individuals may wish to free their credit, but the government shouldn't pretend that it is a panacea or promote it without understanding the potential for unintended consequences.

The fact that major breaches have occurred at government agencies -- such as the United States Office of Personnel Management, the U.S. Postal Service and the IRS -- suggests that the government is unlikely to be holding a secret formula for solving the cybersecurity problem. Warren's heavy-handed price control regime wouldn't improve cybersecurity, and it would increase regulatory burdens on a sector that in truth needs the opposite.

Advertisement

The credit reporting industry is cartelized, thanks to past government interventions. The Fair Credit Reporting Act, now 47 years old, has served to limit competition and partially shield companies such as Equifax from legal claims. Instead of micromanaging the services that firms offer, the government should look to remove rules that prevent competition.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement