Educause Security Discussion mailing list archives
Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches
From: "Manjak, Martin" <mmanjak () ALBANY EDU>
Date: Tue, 5 Aug 2014 14:03:42 +0000
Many states have statutory obligations to report breaches. In those cases, I don't see how the victim has any choice. Marty Manjak ISO University at Albany From: The EDUCAUSE Security Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU] On Behalf Of Peter Lundstedt Sent: Tuesday, August 05, 2014 9:52 AM To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU Subject: Re: [SECURITY] WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches I agree that reputational damage is much harder to measure than financial damage. It seems like it takes an extreme event with a large scope to have a noticeable impact. I would say the Target breach had a reputational impact, as did the one impacting UMD earlier this year. These are attacks you still see in the news months after the original notification. Peter Lundstedt| Information Security Analyst Drake Technology Services (DTS) | Drake University From: Harry Hoffman [mailto:hhoffman () ip-solutions net] Sent: Tuesday, August 05, 2014 8:28 AM To: Peter Lundstedt Cc: security () listserv educause edu<mailto:security () listserv educause edu> Subject: Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches I'd love to see some hard evidence of reputational damage. Folks always point to it as a major concern but I've yet to see one organization show anything tangible in regard to damaged reputation. Cheers, Harry On Aug 5, 2014, at 9:06 AM, Peter Lundstedt <peter.lundstedt () drake edu<mailto:peter.lundstedt () drake edu>> wrote: Curious if anyone read the article in today's Wall Street Journal titled A Contrarian View on Data Breaches. The interviewees seem to have a viewpoint around what's best for their bottom line and for their shareholders, rather than what may be best for the cardholder. We've never suffered a breach (that we know of) but I can't imagine trying to keep it under wraps in hope that our reputation would not suffer. Interested in others opinions. Article Link<http://online.wsj.com/articles/a-contrarian-view-on-data-breaches-1407194237?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTTopStories> Peter Lundstedt| Information Security Analyst Drake Technology Services (DTS) | Drake University
Current thread:
- WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Peter Lundstedt (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Harry Hoffman (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Roger A Safian (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Frazier, William S [ITSYS] (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Peter Lundstedt (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Manjak, Martin (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Quentin L McCallum (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Ben Woelk (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Quentin L McCallum (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Brad Judy (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Jeff Murphy (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Roger A Safian (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Kingsley, Gene (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Harry Hoffman (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Julian Y Koh (Aug 05)
- <Possible follow-ups>
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Harry Hoffman (Aug 05)
- Re: WSJ Article - A Contrarian View on Data Breaches Julian Y Koh (Aug 05)