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The Federal Trade Commission today took action against online customized merchandise platform CafePress over allegations that it failed to secure consumers’ sensitive personal data and covered up a major breach.
The Federal Trade Commission is sending payments totaling more than $370,000 to consumers who were harmed by the data security failures of online merchandise platform CafePress.
The Federal Trade Commission is launching a claims process for consumers who had their Social Security numbers exposed in a data breach involving online merchandise platform CafePress.
This action follows a March 2022 settlement addressing FTC allegations that CafePress neglected to maintain adequate security measures, leading to repeated breaches of sensitive user data.
If you have any questions or need help with your claim, please call 1-833-415-2795 or email info@CafePressSettlement.com. Please type the characters displayed below. Three failed attempts will reset the form. Click on the icon above to listen to the CAPTCHA audio. CAPTCHA audio may not work on all browsers.
The FTC order was finalized roughly four months after a settlement over the poor cybersecurity practices employed by CafePress, which have led to sensitive personal information being compromised in a data breach. The breach came to light in 2019 and it reportedly impacted 23 million accounts.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday it has taken action against CafePress over security lapses leading to a 2019 data breach, entering into proposed settlements with the online...
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission announced a claims process for consumers who had their Social Security numbers leaked during a data breach of online retailer CafePress. CafePress reached a settlement with the FTC in 2022 after the company was accused of inadequately protecting sensitive data.
The Federal Trade Commission reached a proposed $500,000 settlement with e-commerce platform CafePress over an alleged failure to secure consumers’ personal information against a breach and forced the company to bolster its data security.
After a February 2019 breach of CafePress' servers, unknown attackers gained access to, exfiltrated, and later put up for sale on the dark web personal information belonging to 23,205,290 ...