ARTICLE
25 August 2021

What We're Reading – August 24, 2021

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a litigation powerhouse and business accelerator serving leaders in life sciences, private equity, sustainable energy, and technology. The world’s most innovative companies trust Mintz to provide expert advice, protect and monetize their IP, negotiate deals, source financing, and solve complex legal challenges. The firm has over 600 attorneys across offices in Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Washington, DC, San Francisco, San Diego, and Toronto.
There is a glut of information out there regarding privacy and cybersecurity these days. Our new feature "What We're Reading" provides a curated list of articles, blogs, newsletters, and books...
United States Technology

There is a glut of information out there regarding privacy and cybersecurity these days. Our new feature "What We're Reading" provides a curated list of articles, blogs, newsletters, and books that you may find interesting and helpful.

  • Healthcare Continues to be Vulnerable to Ransomware: According to recent survey, despite continuing cyberattacks against healthcare and roughly half of respondents experiencing an externally motivated shutdown in the last six months, more than 60% of hospital IT teams have "other" spending priorities and less than 11% say cybersecurity is a high priority spend. As Bruce Sussman writes in SecureWorld News, "The cyber diagnosis? Risky, expensive, and damaging."
  • Pearson Slammed by SEC for Misleading Data Breach Disclosure:   Public companies beware. The Securities & Exchange Commission is paying attention to how companies disclose data breaches. Pearson PLC will pay $1 million to settle charges that it misled investors in its failure to warn investors (or victims) of the extent and severity of a 2019 data breach – calling it a "data exposure." Read InfoRisk Today for 5 takeaways from the Pearson incident. "In summary: Never hide relevant data breach facts from victims or investors."
  • CISA Provides Recommendations for Protecting Information from Ransomware-Caused Data Breaches.  The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) of the US Department of Homeland Security has released the fact sheet Protecting Sensitive and Personal Information from Ransomware-Caused Data Breaches to address the increase in malicious cyber actors using ransomware to exfiltrate data and then threatening to sell or leak the exfiltrated data if the victim does not pay the ransom. These data breaches, often involving sensitive or personal information, can cause financial loss to the victim organization and erode customer trust.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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