Outsourcing Breach Response Lowers Costs

March 2, 2010 by ADMIN · 1 Comment

By Doug Pollack, Chief Marketing Officer for ID Experts

The Ponemon Institute last month released their 5th annual 2009 Annual Study: Cost of Data Breach. This year, the report explored several new areas and came up with some interesting and in some cases surprising conclusions…

Afraid of the Cloud? Ask the Right Questions

February 11, 2010 by ADMIN · 2 Comments

By Greg George, Managing Partner of GTI Advisors

What if your vendor is acquired, are there assurances in your service agreement allowing you to opt out if you choose to – if so, will all your data be deleted? What if you vendor is acquired by a company based in a foreign country? Maybe the acquiring company ceo, also a peoples republic of china communist party official, will assure you your data has been deleted. All in all – right now, using SaaS simply comes down to a judgment call, what is in the best interest of your firms operations: ease of access, work flow and cost benefits vs. associated risks…

Perplexities of Enterprise Privacy Policies

February 8, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Rebecca Herold (The Privacy Professor) CIPP, CISSP, CISM, CISA, FLMI

An important consideration with information security incidents is identifying if personally identifiable information - PII - is involved. If it is, then the privacy breach response team needs to be put into action to determine whether or not an actual privacy breach occurred. I’m always interested in hearing the challenges and unique situations they run across as they not only create their plans, but also for how they execute them. Here are three of these situations, often overlooked and not planned for, but experienced by organizations.

On Privacy and Cloud Computing Challenges

January 20, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Rebecca Herold (The Privacy Professor) CIPP, CISSP, CISM, CISA, FLMI

Businesses need to scrutinize the information security and privacy programs and practices of vendors and other business partners, and the cloud computing tools, applications and services should be viewed no differently. If your business is entrusting critical processing and data to another entity, you should first ensure it is trustworthy, secure and will meet your organization’s compliance obligations…

On Managing Your Own Health Records

January 11, 2010 by ADMIN · 2 Comments

By Doug Pollack, Chief Marketing Officer for ID Experts

Microsoft HealthVault is designed to let us collect, store, and share health information critical to our family’s well-being and Google Health allows us to organize our health information all in one place, gather our medical records from doctors, hospitals, and pharmacies, and share our information securely with a family member, doctors or caregiver. For now, I probably won’t start trusting my medical history to either Microsoft or Google…

Why There Will Be No Year Of The Cloud

December 15, 2009 by ADMIN · 3 Comments

By Dwayne Melancon, Tripwire’s VP of Corporate and Business Development

Before vast herds of businesses go running to the cloud, they will want to see that others have done it an not been burned. This is classic bell curve stuff - a few will do it, but it will be a while before the majority of the IT organizations use the cloud in any significant way.

Healthcare Data Breaches Slow To Surface

December 2, 2009 by ADMIN · 2 Comments

By Doug Pollack, Chief Marketing Officer for ID Experts

The 2009 ITRC Breach Report had captured numerous healthcare data breaches since the September 23rd effective date for the HITECH Act. So, I’m perplexed as to why there aren’t any data breaches over 500 individuals yet listed by HHS. Surprisingly, there is nothing there.

Smart Grid Privacy Standards Proposed

November 30, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Rebecca Herold (The Privacy Professor) CIPP, CISSP, CISM, CISA, FLMI

Access to live energy use data can reveal if people are in the dwelling, what they are doing, where they are in the dwelling, and access to data use profiles that can reveal specific times and locations of electricity use in specific areas of the dwelling can also indicate the types of activities within the dwelling over a period of time. The information revealed is a type of surveillance. We need layers of privacy protections throughout the entire smart grid to effectively address privacy concerns and prevent privacy invasions and breaches.

SaaS and the Need for Enterprise Architecture

November 17, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

Coby Royer, Technical Product Manager for Symplified

Acquisition and deployment of real solutions is now within grasp of business owners (seemingly) without the need for conventional IT delivery and support. But many questions may go unanswered without engagement of EA, and latent risks (such as compliance and security) may turn into real issues.

Fifteen More Smart Grid Privacy Concerns

November 15, 2009 by ADMIN · 2 Comments

By Rebecca Herold (The Privacy Professor) CIPP, CISSP, CISM, CISA, FLMI

Wouldn’t it be a good idea to have privacy certifications for the organizations that are part of the large smart grid and for the smart meters to help ensure they are appropriately addressing privacy and providing households with informed decision-making capabilities for how the information collected from their homes through these devices are used?

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