Webinar Highlights: The New Normal of Cyber Risk: How Cyber Insurance Has Been Impacted by Changing Global Events
Not only are home networks a possible issue, but many tech support personnel are busy helping workers stay connected.
Artificial intelligence is becoming more pervasive, but can also be a security liability.
Organizations need to build electronic, behavioral and physical defenses against data intruders.
Ransomware intruders are threatening to disclose purloined data but organizations still have obligations even if those disclosures never occur.
Focused industries often run the risk of relying on a small pool of technology providers, which amplifies the effect of security breaches or software failures.
The switch from offline to online is driving greater demand for cyber coverage.
Cyber coverage is an adjunct to prevention and detection, not a replacement.
Small organizations can suffer huge losses if their data is breached or systems penetrated.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control has complicated cyber issues by raising questions about the legality of paying some ransomware claims.
Paying ransomware claims does not have to run afoul of the law, but requires a clear paper trial and rationale.