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  • Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

Morgan Stanley To Pay $60M To Resolve Data Security Case

Morgan Stanley agreed to pay $60 million to settle a lawsuit by customers who said the Wall Street bank exposed their personal data when it twice failed to properly retire some of its older information technology, Jonathan Stempel reported for Reuters.


Photo Insert: Morgan Stanley denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle and has made "substantial" upgrades to its data security practices, according to settlement papers.



A preliminary settlement of the proposed class action on behalf of about 15 million customers was filed on Friday night in Manhattan federal court and requires approval by US District Judge Analisa Torres.


Customers would receive at least two years of fraud insurance coverage, and each can apply for reimbursement of up to $10,000 in out-of-pocket losses.



Morgan Stanley denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle and has made "substantial" upgrades to its data security practices, according to settlement papers.


Customers accused Morgan Stanley of having in 2016 failed to decommission two wealth management data centers before the unencrypted equipment, which still contained customer data, was resold to unauthorized third parties.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

They also said some older servers containing customer data went missing after Morgan Stanley transferred them in 2019 to an outside vendor. Morgan Stanley later recovered the servers, court papers show.





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