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Financial Institutions – Cyber Risk Managing Cyber Risks In An Interconnected World State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February.

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Presentation on theme: "Financial Institutions – Cyber Risk Managing Cyber Risks In An Interconnected World State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February."— Presentation transcript:

1 Financial Institutions – Cyber Risk Managing Cyber Risks In An Interconnected World State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

2 PAGE 2 AGENDA ● A NEW ENVIRONMENT ● CYBER RISKS IN NUMBERS ● IMPACT & CONSEQUENCES ● LOSS EXAMPLES BY COVERAGE TYPE ●QUESTIONS & ANSWERS State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

3 PAGE 3 A NEW ENVIRONMENT

4 PAGE 4 Laws & Regulations Regulatory changes with aggressive enforcement and penalties Failing to protect Personally Identifiable Information (e.g. employee, customer, vendor) or Personal Health Information or Corporate Confidential Information (e.g. customers, patients, members, employees) has material financial & regulatory consequences Risk Exposure Frequency and severity of cyber breaches has not improved with increased security spending and regulation “Industrialization” of private or confidential data theft Financial impact of a privacy breach can exceed $100MM Loss Trends Expenses & liabilities growing as underwriters are paying multi-million dollar losses Credit card issuers/banks are suing for cost to reissue cards Defrauded merchants are suing breached organizations Cyber Insurance Cost of risk transfer has decreased as more & more companies buy Cyber Insurance but there have been some recent market changes with large losses in late 2013 Insurer negotiated discounts on notification / credit monitoring services “Cyber” Insurance has broadened to address these risks A NEW ENVIRONMENT Privacy ~ A Heightened & Evolving Exposure State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

5 PAGE 5 New Culprits Loosely formed groups of people who are very good at hacking and work together to do so –(e.g. Anonymous; Lulzsec) State actors (e.g. China; Iran) New Information Targeted Corporate data and trade secrets Inside information Embarrassing information Corporate weaknesses New Motives Political and ideological Personal War / terrorism Revenge “Hacktivism” A NEW ENVIRONMENT What’s New In Cyber World?! State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

6 PAGE 6 CYBER RISKS IN NUMBERS

7 PAGE 7 Average records lost per breach: Over 383,000 in 2013 versus 83,870 in 2012 Total records breached: 822 million in 2013 versus 260 million in 2012 Other 2013 stats: Total breaches: over 2,100 Breaches per day: nearly 6 8 of 15 largest breaches of all time occurred during 2013 WILLIS BREACH STATS 2013 State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

8 PAGE 8 VERIZON REPORT 2013

9 PAGE 9 NUMBER OF BREACHES US DataLossDB.org State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

10 PAGE 10 CYBER RISKS IN NUMBERS A Global Exposure Source: 2012 Data Breach Investigations Report (Verizon) Breaches by Industry Group State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

11 PAGE 11 IMPACT & CONSEQUENCES

12 PAGE 12  Costs to comply with notification to consumers / employees, credit monitoring costs, cost of restoring data / public relations  Civil penalties and fines  Class Action suits  Legal costs: –Civil, regulatory and possibly criminal defense –Data Privacy counsel can cost over $700 p/hour; major breach involves millions in legal costs  Business Interruption Costs IMPACT & CONSEQUENCES High Potential Cost of a Data Breach State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

13 PAGE 13 LOSS EXAMPLES BY COVERAGE TYPE

14 PAGE 14 Privacy Injury Liability Private lawsuits as a result of unauthorized disclosure or use of private information in violation of privacy laws, government regulations or institutional policies. This coverage includes online and offline information and the cause can be by third-party custodians of information, employee mistakes or unsanctioned willful actions.  Loss Example – 40 million credit card numbers were stolen from large retailer, the resulting lawsuits from banks and customers exceeded $100 million Privacy Regulatory Proceedings and PCI Fines Covers defense of a proceeding or action brought by a privacy regulator and fines imposed where covered by law. Can include cover for PCI fines.  Loss Example – $2.25 million fine imposed on a drug store chain by the FTC and Department of Health and Human Services Settlement for the loss of millions of pharmacy records. LOSS EXAMPLES Privacy Liability State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

15 PAGE 15 Network Security Liability Covers claims arising from an inability to use or access your network, infection of others networks, information damage to other networks, inability of others to rely upon the accuracy, validity or integrity of their information residing on your network.  Loss Example – Hackers obtained access to debit card account records and changed limit parameters resulting in fraud and a liability of $10 million. Content Injury Liability Defamation, disparagement, copyright, trademark, publicity rights and content errors, etc. Covers computer readable content and can be expanded to all media  Can cover unauthorized expression and other exposures over social media sites by employees or others for whom a company might be responsible LOSS EXAMPLES Network & Content Liability State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

16 PAGE 16 Covers expenses incurred in responding to adverse publicity or media attention arising from a claim covered in the policy and other required response costs including: Privacy breach-related “Duty to Notify” costs Costs to procure credit monitoring services on behalf of customers. Call center costs Legal costs from responding to a breach Response coaching costs Forensic costs IT security response costs LOSS EXAMPLES Public Relations & Response State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

17 PAGE 17 Network Loss or Damage Covers costs to recreate or restore network pre-loss conditions. Attacks covered include those instigated by employees.  Loss Example – A broker dealer spent more than $3.5 million to remove timed malicious code designed to bring down the network. Business Interruption & Extra Expenses Covers lost online & offline income, as long as your income is network dependent and the loss is caused by security breach or errors plus expenses of avoiding such a loss.  Loss Example – Professional services firm was the victim of a hacker and lost all its work on an engineering project at a cost of $10 million. LOSS EXAMPLES Network Damages State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

18 PAGE 18 Electronic Theft Covers for theft via a network of money, securities, goods, services and intangible property (e.g., intellectual property).  Loss Example – Stolen credit cards numbers used to obtain goods through an online site and bank procedures are not followed preventing reimbursement form the acquiring bank Network Extortion Pays credible extortionist demands and response costs to demands for money against threats to release private information or bring down a network.  Loss Example – A large media company incurred significant costs responding to a hacker who showed he had access to the company’s networks and sought money from its celebrity CEO against a threat to bring the network down LOSS EXAMPLES Network Crime State Compensation Insurance Fund Audit Committee Meeting – February 19, 2014 Open Agenda Item 6 – Cyber Risk

19 PAGE 19 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS


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