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Murn Meyrick & Jonathan Ashall

Murn Meyrick & Jonathan Ashall. ORIMS Professional Development Day Privacy & Network Security Liability. April 9, 2008. Agenda. Privacy legislation & framework Exposures Recent Examples Insurance Response Underwriting. The Path to Privacy Legislation…….

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Murn Meyrick & Jonathan Ashall

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  1. Murn Meyrick & Jonathan Ashall ORIMS Professional Development Day Privacy & Network Security Liability April 9, 2008

  2. Agenda • Privacy legislation & framework • Exposures • Recent Examples • Insurance Response • Underwriting 2

  3. The Path to Privacy Legislation…… • Growth and importance of IT systems and technology through 1980’s and 1990’s meant past legislation outdated. • Data being collected, stored and transmitted in ways not contemplated when existing legislation enacted. • Clear that new legislation was required to ensure its relevance to the modern world. • Realisation of such led to a raft of legislation being enacted the world over, including…… 3

  4. Privacy Legislation Around the World • Europe – EU Data Protection Act, overseeing various laws at Member State level including UK Data Protection Act. • USA – Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), Gramm Leach Bliley Act (GLB), Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act (HIPAA), Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and various State acts. • Australia – Commonwealth Privacy Act, amended by Privacy Amendment (Private Sector) Act. • Canada – Privacy Act and Personal Information Protection & Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) 4

  5. Common Themes… • All seek to address the collection, storage and use of “personal information” by both Government agencies and the private sector. • All seek to outline appropriate technical and organisational measures to protect such data. • “Personal Information” usually described as any data that can be used to identify a living person, with focus upon financial and healthcare related data. • All seek to outline the rights of individuals and potential sanctions for breaches of such legislation. 5

  6. Legislation Continuing to Evolve • Initial legislative efforts focused on rights of individuals to know what information is being stored by an organisation and to gain access to it but….. • Little or no right to know when such information has been tampered with or leaked illegitimately to a third party as a result of a security or administrative breach. • US has led the way in implementing breach notification laws, mandating that organisations inform those individuals potentially affected by such a breach (notification laws now in place in 40 states and counting) • Following recent well publicised security breach events pressure being put on legislators in other jurisdictions to follow suit. 6

  7. Public Sector Privacy Acts( federal & provincial) Criminal Code Charter of Rights Common Law Collective Agreements Private Sector PIPEDA Quebec Legislation BC, Alta, Ontario Health Privacy Act Sector specific rules/regs Criminal Code Common law Collective Agreements Canadian Privacy Law: The Framework 7

  8. The Exposures • Negligent or intentional disclosure of personal information- mistakes, rogue employee • Cyber Attacks- hackers, extortion, sabotage • Fraud & other criminal offences- new offences proposed November 2007 • Network & website disruptions due to glitches or malicious code 8

  9. The Exposures continued • Electronic theft/loss of proprietary competitive business data • Conflicting laws • New exposures? 9

  10. Exposures 10

  11. The Aftermath:Losses associated with a breach • Third Party Liability • Compensation to clients or employees • Class actions • Third party subrogation costs • Contingent business interruption- downstream loss • Contractual obligations 11

  12. Losses continued • Regulatory/law enforcement • Complaint to Privacy Commissioner/Federal Court • Recommendations/orders to change practices, damages( including humiliation with no cap), fines/penalties( PIPEDA- $100k) • Audit by commissioner • Criminal Code sanctions • Defence Costs for all of above 12

  13. Losses continued Direct Damages to Insured: • Decline in revenue • Restoration/Reconstruction costs • Response Plan • Notification costs • Law enforcement authorities • Auditors • Changes to internal processes • Mitigation/Crisis management costs • Credit monitoring • Call centre & website • PR 13

  14. The Reality: Survey results • FusePoint Data Confidence Survey 2007: • 62% of executives felt security breach would impact their brand • Only 37% have confidence their data is protected against attacks • 20% of companies do not use anti-virus software, 25% do not have a firewall • Symantec Corp. survey 2007: • 91% IT organizations carry out “full scenario” testing of disaster recovery plans. Nearly 50% failed. • 23% of city dwellers have themselves, or know someone who has, fallen victim to fraud or identity theft • IDC Canada Survey 2007: • there is an “irrationally” high level of confidence among Canadian firms regarding their security measures 14

  15. Current Events:A Sample of Incidents Worldwide…. USA • TJX- Intruder gained access to 47 million customers info. Settlements with banks ~$65M • Harvard- hacker attacks server accessing up to 10,000 student accounts and posting some of info on web • Hannaford Bros grocery- over 4 million credit and debit card numbers stolen during authorization process, leading to 1,800 cases of fraud UK • Inland Revenue lost unencrypted discs containing sensitive information of 25 million British citizens. • Nationwide Building Society – theft of laptop containing unencrypted details of 11 million savers. Led to notification letters being sent to all 11 million individuals potentially affected and £980,000 fine being levied by FSA for inadequate systems and controls to address information security risk. 15

  16. …and in Canada • TJX/Winners: • In Canada alone, thousands of cases of fraud reported on stolen cards. Lawsuits follow from banks, shareholders( pension funds), class action by customers, regulatory probes in US and Canada. • CIBC: Jan.07 • loss of computer file in transit between offices with data on 470,000 customers. Regulatory investigation follows. • Club Monaco: Jan.07 • sought help from police and forensic experts to investigate privacy breach of credit card processor • Canada Post: Dec.07 • security breach- login records of scores of small businesses using shipping website available 16

  17. continued… • Passport Canada: Dec. 07 • Security flaw allows access to passport applicants personal information • Air Canada: Nov.07 • AC flights in GTA grounded for hours after computer “glitch” between reservation system and airport locale • Canadian Bar Association: • Unauthorized access to online orders and credit card information • Bell Canada: Feb.08 • 3.3million customers have their personal information stolen. Suspect arrested in Montreal following which public disclosure made. 17

  18. The Insurance Response Evolution of Privacy Liability: • Cyber Insurance • Multimedia insurance • Network liability • Privacy • Disaster recovery analysis 18

  19. Coverage under “traditional” policies • Hodge podge of policies may historically respond including: • Errors & Omissions, General Liability, Data, Property, Media, Crime/Fraud, Directors & Officers, Cyber • Traditional policy response dependant on cause, impact and claimant- not all encompassing • In general limited to the Personal Injury aspect of privacy losses, usually covered under General Liability or Professional Liability policies • Even more specific Cyber Liability policies do not address the unique liabilities presented by the changing legislative environment. • As awareness grows of potential privacy related liabilities, more likely that exclusionary language will be added to traditional policies. 19

  20. Privacy Liability Coverage • Privacy breach • Crisis Management and Notification Expenses • Network Security breach 20

  21. Underwriting • Privacy Statement • Application • Audit • Meetings 21

  22. Questions?

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