FTC Data Security Consent Decree Suggests Minimum Steps Companies Must Take

Posted by Ronald London

The FTC recently announced a consent decree with online retailer Life is good (www.lifeisgood.com) that offers insight into what that agency may believe are the bare minimum steps companies must take when making the kind of generic we-protect-the-information-you-give-us statements found in most privacy policies. The FTC claimed Life is good offered such reassurances but failed to have in place sufficient measures (from the FTC's view) to back them up, based on the ability of a hacker to use SQL injection attacks on Life is good’s website to access consumers' credit card numbers, expiration dates, and security codes. To resolve allegations in a draft complaint the FTC had prepared alleging unfair trade practices, Life is good settled the claims by entering a consent decree requiring it to adopt a comprehensive information-security program and obtain biennial audits by an independent third-party security professional … for the next 20 years.

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California Breach Disclosure Law Now Covers Medical Records

By Charlene Brownlee

California extended its data breach notification law to include incidents involving electronic medical and health insurance information. California's data breach law, SB 1386, had previously covered only financial records. The new law, AB 1298 took effect January 8, 2008. The law adds medical and health-related information to the existing breach notification law definition of "personal information" and expands the application of the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA) to include any business organized for the purpose of maintaining medical information.
 

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Record Number of Data Breaches Reported in 2007, But Optimism Reigns

Posted by Hozaifa Cassubhai

The number of publicly reported data breaches in the United States rose by more than 40 percent in 2007, according to the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC), and it appears Microsoft, among others, is taking steps in response.

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