This year’s IAPP Global Privacy Summit was very informative on a number of fronts, including the helpful insight provided by officials at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on a range of topics. A good summary of some of their comments can be found here, which includes concerns they expressed about the Consumer Privacy Bill
Best Practices For Gramm-Leach-Bliley Compliance
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission) issued a Staff Advisory on best practices for financial institutions that must comply with Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) provisions on data security and customer privacy.
GLBA was enacted to ensure that financial institutions respect the privacy of their customers and protect the security and confidentiality of nonpublic personal information. …
Top 13 for 2013 – Happy Privacy Day
Top 13 data privacy and security issues for 2013…
Continue Reading Top 13 for 2013 – Happy Privacy Day
Massachusetts Company Fined $15,000 Under State’s Data Security Law
The Massachusetts AG’s enforcement of its data security law demonstrates that it does not take lightly the loss of Massachusetts residents’ personal information, even if that loss has not caused any known harm to the affected residents, and that it may remain watchful over the subject of an investigation for years to come.
Continue Reading Massachusetts Company Fined $15,000 Under State’s Data Security Law
WISPs Beyond Massachusetts
Over the past few months, many businesses, particularly in the Northeast Region, have been focusing on creating a written information security program (WISP) to comply with Massachusetts identity theft regulations that went into effect March 1, 2010. For many, this has been a significant effort, reaching most, if not all, parts of their organizations. However…
Addressing Information Risk in 2010
Like individuals, businesses have resolutions/goals for 2010, perhaps even this new decade. As information risk, such as HIPAA or the occurrence of a data breach, continues threaten companies and put individuals’ personal identities, finances and medical information in jeopardy, addressing this issue in the coming years is a worthy resolution for any business. With this…
WISP: Do You Have a Plan for Your Company’s Sensitive Information?
Data privacy and security laws in states such as Massachusetts, Maryland and Nevada require businesses to develop written policies and procedures that provide administrative, physical, and technological safeguards to protect personal information – or a "written information security program" or "WISP." These laws do not require protections for confidential company information and trade secrets, but…