What is LexisNexis FIRSt?

What is LexisNexis FIRSt?

The LexisNexis® Financial Institution Reporting System (FIRSt) solution can reduce your lien holder notification costs, including Escrow billing—by 50 percent or more, eliminate your returned mail and improve your operating efficiency. FIRSt enables carriers to be fully compliant with Loss Payee notifications.

When did LexisNexis acquire ChoicePoint?

2008
In the fall of 2008, Reed Elsevier (parent company of LexisNexis) acquired ChoicePoint, Inc., a provider of complementary solutions with a leading position in providing valuable data and analytics to the insurance sector.

What happened LexisNexis?

Prepare last rites for Lexis.com. The legacy legal research service will be leaving this world at the end of 2017. This week, LexisNexis began notifying Lexis.com customers that it will be shutting down the service over the next 12 months and moving them to the newer Lexis Advance research platform.

Is LexisNexis legal?

LexisNexis Legal & Professional is a leading global provider of legal, regulatory and business information and analytics that help customers increase productivity, improve decision-making and outcomes, and advance the rule of law around the world. We endeavour to advance the rule of law across the world.

Who founded LexisNexis?

Donald Wilson, 82; principal creator of LexisNexis database. H. Donald Wilson, under whose leadership the commercial database service LexisNexis introduced electronic research to law firms and news organizations, died of a heart attack Nov.

When was ChoicePoint founded?

1997
LexisNexis Risk Solutions/Founded
ChoicePoint formed in 1997 in a spin-off from Atlanta-based Equifax Inc. (NYSE: EFX). In 2007, ChoicePoint’s profit jumped about 92 percent to $32.4 million on $982 million in revenue.

Who bought LexisNexis?

Reed Elsevier
In December 1994, Mead sold the LexisNexis system to Reed Elsevier for $1.5 billion.

Who bought ChoicePoint?

LONDON — Reed Elsevier, the educational publisher, said Thursday that it would acquire ChoicePoint, the troubled U.S. provider of information services for the insurance industry, for $3.6 billion.