$17.5M Infosys McCamish Systems Class Action Settlement Ends Lawsuit Over 2023 Data Breach
by Chloe Gocher
McNally et al. v. Infosys McCamish Systems, LLC
Filed: November 7, 2024 ◆§ 1:24-cv-00995
A $17.5M settlement ends a class action lawsuit over the Infosys McCamish Systems data breach that exposed the personal info of roughly 3.7M people.
Georgia
A $17.5 million class action settlement will end litigation against Infosys McCamish Systems over a 2023 data breach that exposed the sensitive personal information of approximately 3.7 million people.
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The Infosys McCamish class action settlement received preliminary approval from the court on July 16, 2025 and covers all United States residents whose personal information was compromised in the Infosys data breach, including the 3.7 million people who were individually notified of the incident by Infosys McCamish Systems.
The court-approved website for the Infosys settlement can be found at InfosysDataSettlement.com.
Infosys McCamish settlement class members who submit a timely, valid claim form will be able to receive up to $6,000 in reimbursement for monetary losses related to the data breach. The class action settlement also offers credit monitoring and/or a pro rata (equal share) residual cash payment, which the court estimates will be approximately $30 per claimant.
According to the class action settlement website, losses related to the Infosys data breach may include:
- Professional fees such as attorneys’ fees, accountants’ fees and fees for credit repair services;
- Unreimbursed losses relating to fraud or identity theft;
- Credit monitoring costs that were incurred between the time of the data breach, which occurred between October 29, 2023 and November 2, 2023, and the date the claim is submitted;
- Costs associated with freezing or unfreezing credit with any credit reporting agency; and
- Miscellaneous expenses such as fax, postage, notary, long-distance telephone charges and mileage.
In order to claim reimbursement for data breach-related monetary losses, class members must submit reasonable documentation as proof, the settlement website notes.
The credit monitoring offered by the Infosys McCamish Systems class action settlement includes two years of one-bureau credit monitoring and $1,000,000 in identity theft insurance protections, the site relays.
The total amounts for the loss reimbursement and residual cash payment benefits, as well as the duration of the credit monitoring service benefit, may increase or decrease on a pro rata basis depending on the total number of valid claims filed. According to the settlement website, if enough claims are filed that the cost of the reimbursements and credit monitoring services alone consume the entire class member benefit portion of the $17.5 million settlement fund, the residual cash payment will no longer be available.
To submit a claim form online, class members can visit this page and log in with the unique class member ID found in their copy of the settlement notice.
Alternatively, a PDF of the claim form is available to print, fill out and mail back to the address listed on the form.
All claim forms must be submitted online or postmarked no later than December 1, 2025.
Infosys McCamish has also agreed, as part of the class action settlement, to upgrade and update its cybersecurity systems and protocols to better protect the sensitive information it possesses.
A hearing is scheduled for December 18, 2025 to determine whether the Infosys McCamish settlement will receive final court approval. Settlement benefits will begin to be distributed to class members only after final approval is granted and any appeals are resolved.
The Infosys McCamish Systems class action lawsuit claimed that the company, a tech platform provider for the insurance and investment service industries, failed to properly protect the sensitive personal data in its care from a cyberattack that occurred between October 29, 2023 and November 2, 2023, during which unauthorized third parties accessed the data of approximately 3.7 million individuals.
Head to ClassAction.org’s settlements page for a complete list of data breach settlements.
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