Does your business need an established information security program? Probably. Does it have one? Probably not.
Information security programs are designed to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of your company’s data and information technology assets. Depending on your industry and your clientele, you may also be required by federal, state, or international law to have an information security program.
This webinar will introduce you to the basics of how to put one in place, starting with identifying your incident response team, putting applicable insurance policies into place, and closing any gaps in the security of your data.
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/how-to-build-and-implement-information-security-program-2020/
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5. Disclaimer
The material in this webinar is for informational purposes only. It should not be considered
legal, financial or other professional advice. You should consult with an attorney or other
appropriate professional to determine what may be best for your individual needs. While
Financial Poise™ takes reasonable steps to ensure that information it publishes is accurate,
Financial Poise™ makes no guaranty in this regard.
5
6. Meet the Faculty
MODERATOR:
Kathryn Nadro - Sugar Felsenthal Grais & Helsinger LLP
PANELISTS:
Michael Riela - Tannenbaum Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt LLP
Mark Trembacki - Risk Management Levers, Inc.
J. Eduardo Campos - Embedded-Knowledge, Inc.
6
7. About This Webinar – How to Build and Implement
your Company's Information Security Program
Does your business need an established information security program? Probably. Does it
have one? Probably not.
Information security programs are designed to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and
availability of your company’s data and information technology assets. Depending on your
industry and your clientele, you may also be required by federal, state, or international law to
have an information security program.
This webinar will introduce you to the basics of how to put one in place, starting with
identifying your incident response team, putting applicable insurance policies into place, and
closing any gaps in the security of your data.
7
8. About This Series – Cybersecurity and Data Privacy
Data security, data privacy, and cybersecurity are critical issues for your company to consider
in today’s business landscape. Data breaches from high profile companies, including law
firms, generate worldwide headlines and can severely damage your business’s reputation. In
certain industries, a patchwork of state and federal laws and regulations may cover your
business, leading to compliance headaches. This series explores the various laws and
regulations which govern businesses both in the US and abroad, as well as how to implement
and enforce an information security policy to protect your company and limit any damage from
a data breach.
Each Financial Poise Webinar is delivered in Plain English, understandable to investors, business owners, and
executives without much background in these areas, yet is of primary value to attorneys, accountants, and other
seasoned professionals. Each episode brings you into engaging, sometimes humorous, conversations designed to
entertain as it teaches. Each episode in the series is designed to be viewed independently of the other episodes so that
participants will enhance their knowledge of this area whether they attend one, some, or all episodes.
8
9. Episodes in this Series
#1: Introduction to US Privacy and Data Security: Regulations and Requirements
Premiere date: 9/24/20
#2: Introduction to EU General Data Protection Regulation: Planning,
Implementation, and Compliance
Premiere date: 10/22/20
#3: How to Build and Implement your Company's Information Security Program
Premiere date: 11/19/20
#4: Data Breach Response: Before and After the Breach
Premiere date: 12/17/20
9
10. Episode #3
How to Build and Implement your Company's
Information Security Program
10
11. Introduction
• Information security programs are a documented set of a company or agency’s
information security policies, guidelines and procedures
• Majority of security programs aim to assess risk, monitor threats, and mitigate cyber
security attacks
• Massachusetts and New York are the only states with strict information security
requirements
Other states starting to implement similar laws
• Implemented in any industry that deals with personally identifiable information
11
12. Information Security Programs – Then and Now
• Early information security efforts identified confidentiality, integrity, and availability
(“CIA Triad”) as primary security factors
• The rise of information security programs -
1967 - military computers were hacked and CIA Triad found to be inadequate - not
much was changed
1970s - “phreakers” exploit vulnerabilities in telephone network to make free long
distance calls
1980s - First National Bank of Chicago hacked for $70 million
1990s & 2000s - computers become targets as more people provide personal
information online
12
13. Information Security Programs – Then and Now
• Today, the CIA Triad eventually evolved into “Parkerian Hexad”
Parkerian Hexad factors -
o Confidentiality/control
o Information integrity
o Authenticity
o Availability
o Utility
13
14. What is Information Security?
• Information security refers to processes and methodologies designed and implemented
to protect print, electronic, or any other form of information or data, including -
Confidential, private, and sensitive information; or
Data derived from unauthorized access, use, misuse, disclosure, destruction,
modification, or disruption
14
15. Information Security vs. Computer Security vs.
Information Assurance
• Share the common goals of protecting confidentiality, integrity, and availability of
information
• Terms used interchangeably but do not have the exact same meaning
Differences lie in the approach to subject, methodologies used, and areas of
concentration
• Information security is concerned with the protection of the CIA Triad regardless of the
form the data may take: print, electronic, or other
15
16. What Information is Protected?
• Personally identifiable information (PII) or sensitive personal information (SPI)
Home address
Social security #
Credit card #
Date birth
• Health information
Medical records
• Other proprietary information
Financial data
• Trade secrets
16
17. Key Elements of an Effective Information Systems
Program (ISP)
• Purpose
• Scope
• Information security objectives
CIA Triad
• Authority and access control policy
• Classification of data
• Data support and operations
• Security awareness sessions
• Responsibilities and duties of personnel
• Relevant laws
17
18. The Purpose
• Different institutions may create ISPs for various reasons, but they generally share few
similarities, including -
Establish a general approach to information security
Detect and forestall the compromise of information security
o i.e. misuse of data, networks, computer systems and applications
Protect reputation of the company with respect to its ethical and legal obligations
Recognize the rights of customers
o i.e. providing effective mechanism for responding to complaints
18
19. The Scope
• Generally, ISPs address:
All data
Programs
Systems
Facilities, and
Other tech infrastructure
19
20. Information Security Objectives
• An organization looking to implement ISP needs to have well-defined objectives
• Information security systems are deemed to safeguard 3 main objectives -
Confidentiality
Integrity
Availability
20
22. The CIA Triad
• Confidentiality
Controlling who gets to read information
Ensuring only individuals who need access to this information to do their jobs get to
see it
Access restricted to only authorized individuals
• Integrity
Ensuring information and programs are changed only in a specified and authorized
manner
o E.g. information has not been tampered with or deleted by those with unauthorized
access
22
23. The CIA Triad
• Availability
Ensuring authorized users have continued access to information and resources
o Information is readily available to those who need it to successfully conduct an
organization’s business
23
24. The CIA Triad
• Donn Parker, one of the pioneers in the field of IT security, expanded the threefold
paradigm by suggesting also “authenticity” and “utility”
Link: https://resources.infosecinstitute.com/key-elements-information-security-policy/#gref
24
25. Authority Access & Control Policy
• Typically, a security policy has a hierarchical pattern
Junior staff usually bound not to share the little amount of information they have
unless explicitly authorized
Senior manager may have enough authority to make a decision on what data can be
shared and with whom
Policies governing senior employees may not be the same policy governing junior
employees
ISP should address every basic position in the organization with specifications that
will clarify their authoritative status
25
26. Classification of Data
• Data can have different value and thus may impose separation and specific handling
regimes/procedures for each kind of data
• Information classification system is commonly sorted as:
High right class
Confidential class
Class public
26
27. Classification of Data
• High risk class - generally data protected by state and federal legislation
Information covered under The Data Protection Act, HIPAA, FERPA
Financial,
Payroll, and
Personnel (privacy requirements)
27
28. Classification of Data
• Confidential class
Data in this class may not enjoy the privilege of being under the wing of law, but the
data owner judges that it should be protected against unauthorized disclosure
• Class public
Information freely distributed
• Data owners should determine both the data classification and the exact measures a
data custodian needs to take to preserve integrity in accordance to that level
28
29. Data Support and Operations
• The regulation of general system mechanisms responsible for data protection
Data backup
Movement of data
29
30. Security Awareness Employee Meetings
• Security awareness training could help provide employees with information regarding
how to collect/use/delete data, maintain data quality, records management,
confidentiality, privacy, appropriate utilization of IT systems, correct usage social
networking, etc.
30
31. Responsibilities and Duties of Personnel
• Not unusual for institutions to hire an ISP person with the sole responsibility of…
implementation,
education,
incident response,
user access reviews, and
periodic updates of an ISP
31
32. Relevant Laws and Other ISP Items
• An ISP is likely to include reference to relevant laws
i.e. The Data Protection Act (1998)
• ISP may also include -
Virus Protection Procedure,
Intrusion Detection Procedure,
Remote Work Procedure,
Technical Guidelines,
Consequences for Non-compliance,
Disciplinary Actions,
Terminated Employees
32
33. Massachusetts Information System Law
• 201 C.M.R. 17: Standards for the Protection of Personal Information of Residents of the
Commonwealth
• Implemented in 2010 - considered the top personal information protection law in the US
• Makes every person or entity that owns personal information of a Massachusetts resident
to adopt a written information security program (WISP) designed with appropriate
safeguards
33
34. Massachusetts Information System Law
• In Massachusetts, every information security program must include:
At least one employee maintaining the information security program;
Identify foreseeable security risks, both internal and external;
Employee security policies dealing with access and transportation of personal
information outside of the business;
Disciplinary measures for violations;
Methods of how to prevent terminated employees from reaching personal
information;
34
35. Massachusetts Information System Law
Oversee third-party service providers by taking reasonably steps to adopt and
maintain security measures consistent with the entity;
Restrictions on stored personal information access;
Regular monitoring to ensure compliance with the implemented information security
program and stop unauthorized access;
Annual review of the security program, or whenever there is a material change in the
business practices; and
Document any incident involving a security breach and actions taken in response to
breaches, and any review of business practices to protect personal information, if
necessary.
35
36. California Consumer Privacy Act
• Effective January 1, 2020
• Mandates companies do the following:
Inform consumers about the categories of personal information collected and the
purposes for which the information is being used;
Respond to verifiable consumer requests to access certain information;
Allow customers to opt-out of the sale of their personal information; and
Enable consumers (subject to carve outs) to request that businesses delete their
personal information
36
37. California Consumer Privacy Act
• Applies to business if they are for-profit businesses that collect and control California
residents’ personal information, do business in California, and satisfy one of the following:
Have annual gross revenues in excess of $25 million, or
Receive or disclose the personal information of 50,000 or more California residents,
households, or devices on an annual basis, or
Derive 50 percent or more of their annual revenues from selling California residents’
personal information.
37
38. CCPA Private Right of Action
• Limited private right of action for consumers when there is an “unauthorized access and
exfiltration, theft, disclosure of a consumer’s nonencrypted or nonredacted personal
information” for a business’s violation of “the duty to implement and maintain reasonable
security procedures and practices”
• Consumer has to give the business 30 days to cure the alleged violation and to respond
with a written statement that the violation has been cured
Consumers can then bring a civil suit for statutory damages of between $100 and $750
“per consumer per incident or actual damages, whichever is greater.”
o Cal. Civ. Code § 1798.150(a)(1)(A)
• Attorney General may also issue fines of up to $7,500 per violation, with maximum
penalties reserved for intentional noncompliance
38
39. What Businesses Subject to CCPA Should Do
• While there is no explicit requirement for an information security program in the CCPA,
having one in place will help defend a business from an accusation that it didn’t “maintain
reasonable security procedures and practices” prior to any data breach
In 2016, the California Attorney General issued a “Data Breach Report” which
identified safeguards the then-Attorney General viewed as constituting reasonable
security practices, including data security controls published by the Center for Internet
Security
Those controls include a written information security program, oversight by a dedicated
security officer or supervisor, employee training, vendor management, an incident
response plan, and ongoing risk assessment and management
39
40. Employee Maintaining the Information Security
Program
• Employee is the designated officer for handling every aspect of the program.
A designated security officer is responsible for coordinating and maintaining the
security program.
• This person should maintain independence by reporting to someone outside of the IT
department.
40
41. Assessing Risk
• What risks could your organization face?
Examples: loss of data, unauthorized access, data corruption, hack, third-party data
sharing, etc.
• What would be appropriate, cost-effective management techniques for these risks?
41
42. NY Information Systems Law for Financial Service
Companies
• Requires that all financial service companies maintain an ISP
Any company regulated by the Department of Financial Services
Exceptions -
o Organization with fewer than 10 employees, less than $5 million in gross annual
revenue for three years, or less than $10 million in year-end total assets
42
43. NY Information Systems Law for Financial Service
Companies
• The ISP must address:
information security;
data governance and classification;
asset inventory and device management;
access controls and identity management;
business continuity and disaster recovery planning and resources;
systems operations and availability concerns;
systems and network security;
systems and network monitoring;
43
44. NY Information Systems Law for Financial Service
Companies
• The ISP must address:
systems and application development and quality assurance;
physical security and environmental controls;
customer data privacy;
vendor and Third Party Service Provider management;
risk assessment; and
incident response.
44
45. Additional Elements of a Good Information Security
Program
• Designated security officer (DSO)
• Risk Assessment
• Policies and Procedures
• Organizational security awareness
• Regulatory standards compliance
• Audit compliance plan
45
47. Sources
University of Iowa’s Information Security Program:
https://itsecurity.uiowa.edu/resources/faculty-staff/enterprise-information-
security-program
https://resources.infosecinstitute.com/key-elements-information-security-
policy/#gref
47
49. About The Faculty
Kathryn Nadro - knadro@sfgh.com
Kathryn (“Katie”) Nadro advises clients on a diverse array of business matters, including commercial and
business disputes, employment issues, and data security and privacy compliance. Katie works with
individuals and businesses of all sizes to craft successful resolutions tailored to each individual matter.
Katie has broad experience representing companies and individuals in contract, non-compete,
discrimination, harassment, fiduciary duty, and trade secret litigation in state and federal court. With a
background as both in-house and outside counsel, Katie understands that business objectives, time, and
resources play an important role in reaching a favorable outcome for each client. Katie assists clients in
navigating employment issues ranging from employee handbooks and FMLA policies to litigating
discrimination and harassment claims, all while ensuring business needs and objectives are met. She
also counsels clients on data security and privacy issues, including policy drafting and compliance with
state, federal, and international law.
49
50. About The Faculty
Michael Riela - Riela@thsh.com
Mike Riela is a partner in Tannenbaum Helpern’s Creditors’ Rights and Business Reorganization practice.
With more than 15 years of experience, Mike advises companies on complex restructuring, distressed
M&A, loan transactions and bankruptcy related litigation matters. Mike has in-depth experience in
advising clients on corporate and real estate bankruptcies, workouts, Chapter 11 and Chapter 7
bankruptcy cases, debtor-in-possession (DIP) and bankruptcy exit loan facilities, secondary market
trading of distressed debt and trade claims, Section 363 sales and bankruptcy retention and fee
agreements and disputes. His clients include banks, administrative agents, indenture trustees, hedge
funds, private equity firms, professional services firms, trade creditors, contract counterparties,
shareholders, debtors and investors. Mike has represented buyers of assets in Section 363 and out-of-
court sales from sellers such as Evergreen Solar, Inc., Sonic Telecommunications International, Ltd,
Urban Communicators PCS Limited Partnership, US Aggregate, Inc., and Vectrix Corporation, as well as
representing lenders, trustees and administrative agents in major Chapter 11 cases and workouts such
as Delta Air Lines, Inc., Extended Stay Inc., Buffets Inc., Legends Gaming LLC, Nortel Networks, Premier
International Holdings Inc., and many others.
50
51. About The Faculty
Mark Trembacki – marktrembacki@gmail.com
As Managing Principal of Risk Management Levers, Mark Trembacki provides organizations
with practical value-added solutions in strategy development and execution, enterprise risk
management, acquisition integration and governance. Mark enjoyed a diverse career at BMO
Financial Group, holding a variety of executive risk management and business leadership
roles. He has also served as an instructor teaching Enterprise Risk Management in the
Masters of Finance program at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Mark graduated from the University of Illinois, earned an MBA in Finance from The University
of Chicago Booth School of Business, and is a CPA. He earned a Cyber Security
Management Graduate Certificate from the University of Virginia and is recognized as a
National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Governance Fellow. Mark serves as
Board Chair of the DuPage Children’s Museum and Treasurer of the Chicago History
Museum.
51
52. About The Faculty
J. Eduardo Campos – jeduardo.campos@embedded-knowledge.com
After creating business growth opportunities on four continents, J. Eduardo Campos spent
thirteen years at Microsoft, first as a cybersecurity advisor, then leading innovative projects at
the highest levels of government in the U.S. and abroad. Today, Eduardo is living his dream
of building a better tomorrow through his consulting firm, Embedded-Knowledge, Inc. Working
with organizations and entrepreneurs, he develops customized business strategies and forms
partnerships focused on designing creative solutions to complex problems.
52
53. Questions or Comments?
If you have any questions about this webinar that you did not get to ask during the live
premiere, or if you are watching this webinar On Demand, please do not hesitate to email us
at info@financialpoise.com with any questions or comments you may have. Please include
the name of the webinar in your email and we will do our best to provide a timely response.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The material in this presentation is for general educational purposes
only. It has been prepared primarily for attorneys and accountants for use in the pursuit of
their continuing legal education and continuing professional education.
53
54. About Financial Poise
54
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