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Insurance shapes how cyber risk is priced, transferred, and investigated, influencing breach costs, security incentives, and liability.

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Background for this topic.

Cyber insurance transfers some financial risk from security incidents to an insurer under a contract. Policies may cover first-party costs such as forensic investigation, system restoration, notification, and interruption of the insured’s business, as well as third-party privacy or security claims. Coverage depends on limits, deductibles, exclusions, and the policy’s definitions; regulatory penalties and ransom payments, for example, may be restricted or unavailable in some jurisdictions.

For security practitioners, insurance makes evidence of controls an operational and legal concern. Underwriting and claims may examine multifactor authentication, protected backups, logging, vulnerability remediation, access control, and tested incident-response plans. Inaccurate application answers or failure to meet policy conditions can reduce or invalidate recovery. During a claim, organizations may also share sensitive personal, technical, and investigative information with insurers, brokers, lawyers, and responders, requiring careful privacy, confidentiality, and evidence-handling practices.

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Bank Info Security 11 months, 1 week ago

Insurance Firm Notifies 156K Victims - 1 Year After the Hack

What Makes Timely and Accurate Breach Reporting So Difficult for Some Organizations?An Illinois-based brokerage firm that works with employers, businesses and consumers to obtain various types of insurance coverage is notifying nearly 156,000 people that their protected health information was compromised in a data theft hack that occurred more than a year ago. Why the delay?