When Code Spaces suffered a data breach in 2014, the company shut down within weeks. When Equifax exposed 147 million Americans' Social Security numbers in 2017, it recovered fully within two years and continues operating as one of three credit bureaus controlling Americans' financial lives. This isn't coincidence—it's the predictable outcome of a system where large corporations transform catastrophic data breaches from existential threats into manageable quarterly expenses.
While 60% of small businesses fail within six months of a cyberattack, Fortune 500 companies see their stock prices recover within 53 days on average. Settlement payments work out to less than $5 per affected individual—roughly the cost of a coffee—while representing less than 5% of a single quarter's profit. Meanwhile, breached data flows into a $441 billion data broker industry that aggregates, enriches, and resells personal information, creating a secondary market where stolen identities become purchasable intelligence.
The disparity isn't accidental. Through coordinated lobbying campaigns, corporations have shaped privacy legislation in over three dozen states, registered hundreds of lobbyists, and spent over $125 million to ensure that opt-out frameworks replace consumer consent, that private rights of action are eliminated, and that penalties remain negligible. When the CFPB attempted to regulate data brokers in 2024, the rule was withdrawn five months later. The result: a system designed to extract value from personal information rather than safeguard it, where small businesses die from the same breaches that large corporations absorb as rounding errors.
This investigation examines how America's largest corporations have transformed data security from a mandate into a choice—and why they consistently choose profits over protection.
Tag: consumer advocacy
Americans Are All Too Eager to Pay a Premium Only to Be Poisoned by Their Favorite Brands
In June 2022, a premium meal from Daily Harvest—backed by Gwyneth Paltrow and Serena Williams—sent hundreds to hospitals with liver damage. The culprit? An ingredient that entered America's food supply without FDA oversight. This wasn't a discount brand cutting corners. This was expensive, aspirational wellness food. And it reveals an uncomfortable truth: the price you pay has nothing to do with safety. From Burt's Bees lipstick testing positive for lead to Fenty Beauty containing "forever chemicals," from the FDA allowing 10,000 food additives it's never reviewed to cosmetics companies hiding toxins behind the word "fragrance"—Americans are paying premiums to be poisoned by the brands they trust most. As regulatory loopholes swallow consumer protection and corporate greenwashing reaches epidemic levels (52% of consumers now recognize it), this investigation exposes how the illusion of "premium equals pure" has become America's most dangerous—and profitable—lie.