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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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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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Wanna know a secret? Whether you're logging into your bank, health insurance, or even your email, most services today do not live by passwords alone. Now commonplace, multifactor authentication (MFA) requires users to enter a second or third proof of identity. However, not all forms of MFA are created equal, and the one-time passwords orgs send to your phone have holes so big you could drive a truck through them.…

Bank Info Security 7 months, 1 week ago

23andMe to Get $16.5M in Unused Cyber Insurance

Bankrupt Firm Plans to Use the Settlement Money to Pay Off Cyber ClaimsAs part of its ongoing Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, 23andMe Holding Co. - now named Chrome Holding - has reached a settlement with its cyber insurers for the carriers to buy back $16.5 million of the consumer genetics testing firm's unused cyber policy. What will the company do with the funds?