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SEC comes down on Breached Companies

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with IDTheftSecurity.com Inc

If you’re wondering if businesses, who’ve been targets of cybercrime, have been properly handling the fallout, you have company: The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The SEC is investigating this very issue. Key Questions Include:

  • Did the businesses adequately protect data?
  • Were investors properly notified about the breach’s impact?

One of the companies being investigated is Target Corp.

The SEC, historically, has concentrated on giving guidance to companies regarding disclosure of data-breach risks, and the SEC has traditionally also assisted with ensuring that financial companies were well-equipped against hackers.

But the SEC doesn’t like when there seems to be incomplete disclosures of the data breaches or some kind of perceived misleading information.

For example, Target didn’t disclose its breach until the day after it was first reported—by renowned security blogger Brian Krebs.

Just how much should companies say about breaches? This is being debated among regulators, corporate attorneys and activist investors.

Nevertheless, public companies owe it to investors to inform them of material compromises that could affect the investors’ decisions to sell or buy shares. A material attack, says the SEC, includes one that makes a company greatly boost what it spends on defenses, and one in which intellectual property is stolen.

Businesses in general would rather keep silent about breaches to avoid negative fallout. At the same time, it’s not easy to come up with evidence that a business should have disclosed more about a data breach than it actually did. A stolen trade secret, even, won’t necessarily be harmful to a big company’s growth or profits. The interpretation here varies almost as much as the different kinds of cyber attacks do.

Robert Siciliano is an Identity Theft Expert to AllClearID. He is the author of 99 Things You Wish You Knew Before Your Identity Was Stolen See him knock’em dead in this identity theft prevention video. Disclosures.

Bill & Cyndi Daves
Hiawassee, Young Harris, Blairsville, Hayesville, Murphy and Beyond! - Hiawassee, GA
TeamDAVES - Your REALTORS In the GA/NC Mountains!

Robert -  I am sure there's a fine line to walk when deciding how much information to disclose about a breach.  While one doesn't want to compromise the investigation, one should also be concerned about making people aware there may have been an issue.

Aug 31, 2014 11:12 PM
John McCormack, CRS
Albuquerque Homes Realty - Albuquerque, NM
Honesty, Integrity, Results, Experienced. HIRE Me!

Good morning Robert.  Thought I'd drop by and wish you a great Labor Day!  I "think" we will have a down day.  Key word there is "think" :) 

Sep 01, 2014 01:11 AM
Sandy Padula & Norm Padula, JD, GRI
HomeSmart Realty West & Florida Realty Investments - , CA
Presence, Persistence & Perseverance

These breached business owed their consumers better protection. No longer is 256 bit encryption sufficient.

Sep 01, 2014 01:36 AM
Jack Mossman - The Nines Team at Keller Williams in Lodi
The Nines Team at Keller Williams in Lodi - Lodi, CA
The Nines Team in Lodi

Robert - A real estate mantra is "disclose...disclose...disclose!"  While the SEC may spend more of its resources on the "investors" and their protection ... the Consumers have an equal interest in their protection ... perhaps it should just be directed toward the Commerce Department.  Too often our systems seem to get muddied when one "group" expands their sphere beyond their perceived limits to include the actions of another.  It make for good television drama, but not so much in real life!

Sep 01, 2014 03:38 AM
Grant Schneider
Performance Development Strategies - Armonk, NY
Your Coach Helping You Create Successful Outcomes

Robert - businesses need to have a security policy in place which includes everything from retention, safeguard, and disclosure.  Not many do.

Sep 01, 2014 11:31 AM