By John Hilton
InsuranceNewsNet September 6, 2018
Cybersecurity is
back in the news as banks, insurers and other financial entities faced another
tough compliance hurdle in New York.
The Sept. 4 deadline
brought another host of requirements contained within New York's tough
cybersecurity initiative approved last year. The New York Department of
Financial Services passed its own rules without waiting for state insurance
commissioners, who later amended its model law to resemble the New York effort.
“New York stepped
into the void and took decisive action to ensure appropriate minimum standards
protecting financial institutions’ data systems, including consumers’ sensitive
personal information," said Maria T. Vullo, superintendent of the DFS.
"These new protections, which include encryption, access controls and
audit trails, add crucial tools to the regulation’s prior requirements in
protecting the institutions and consumers.”
The deadline
requires companies to have started mandatory annual reporting to the board by
its Chief Information Security Officer on critical aspects of the cybersecurity
program, and have an audit trail designed to reconstruct material financial
transactions.
Also, companies
must implement encryption to protect nonpublic information held or transmitted
by the company. There are other requirements as well.
"There are
penalties that could apply if you have not taken some of the measures that are
defined in this regulation," said Patrick Knight, senior director of cyber
strategy and technology for Veriato. "For
example, if there is a breach, it’s specified that once a breach is identified
you have a 72-hour window to start notifying those affected by it. Well, 72
hours can go by very quickly if you don’t know what you’re doing."
Spreading
To Other States
New York might have
gone first, but it will not be the last state to tackle cybersecurity
regulations. As of May, there were at least 36 other states, including the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, working on some type of regulation for
cybersecurity in financial services, said Ari Vared, senior director of
product at CyberPolicy and CoverHound.
"Overall, I
think there’s a movement," he added. "Where it stands today is a
moving target. Obviously, New York has put the strongest stake in the ground
and is leading the way in a lot of ways."
New York found a
way to limit the impact on smaller companies through exemptions.
Retail financial
advisors with fewer than 1,000 customers, less than $5 million in gross annual
revenue and less than $10 million in year-end assets benefit from a “limited
exemption,” according to the NYDFS regulations.
But there are no
exemptions for third parties doing business as affiliated service providers
with banks, insurance companies and distributors.
"The larger
organizations have the resources and the money to absorb this and it won’t be a
big impact," said Jamie Pickles, general manager of insurance for Jornaya, a
marketing and technology consulting company. "Smaller organizations are
mostly exempt, so it will be the mid-sized companies that will be impacted the
most."
New York regulators
say the far-reaching proposal is necessary to protect the public interest.
Recent data breaches point to network threats from abroad that are able to
penetrate as deep as the U.S. election process.
Not
Just Hackers
The cybersecurity
regulations cover not just outside hackers. Companies are required to provide
oversight of anyone who has access to their data.
"Organizations
that are collecting data and have data on people stored in databases, they need
to have monitoring of the people who have access to that information to make
sure they’re handling it properly," Knight said.
"To make sure
that they’re not downloading all of the contents of that database and taking it
to a competitor. Or to post it on the dark web. This is the world we live in
now."
The New York
cybersecurity rules will take full effect in March 2019.
InsuranceNewsNet
Senior Editor John Hilton has covered business and other beats in more than 20
years of daily journalism. John may be reached
at john.hilton@innfeedback.com.
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