Is the Bottom Line Impacted by Security Breaches?

From: Kenneth F. Belva (ken_at_ftusecurity.com)
Date: 09/28/05

  • Next message: Debasis Mohanty: "Bypassing Personal Firewall (Zone Alarm Pro) Using DDE-IPC"
    Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2005 10:22:05 -0400 (EDT)
    To: bugtraq@securityfocus.com, full-disclosure@lists.grok.org.uk
    
    

    White and Case, a top NYC law firm, posted a survey on Data Security
    Breach Notifications on September 26, 2005.

    From the press release: "Victims of personal data security breaches are
    showing their displeasure by terminating relationships with the companies
    that maintained their data, according to a new national survey sponsored
    by global law firm White & Case. The independent survey of nearly 10,000
    adults, conducted by the respected privacy research organization Ponemon
    Institute, reveals that nearly 20 percent of respondents say they have
    terminated a relationship with a company after being notified of a
    security breach."

    White and Case Press release:
    http://www.whitecase.com/news/news_detail.aspx?newsid=11731&type=News%20Releases

    White and Case Paper:
    http://www.whitecase.com/files/tbl_s5107Materials/FileUpload5837/151/Security_Breach_Survey.pdf

    My research takes a macro approach: "The keynote address will cover
    reputational risk in light of recent disclosures of high profile security
    incidents at such institutions as CitiFinancial (Citigroup), Bank of
    America and Wachovia, Choicepoint, DSW Shoe Warehouse and Polo Ralph
    Lauren. The presentation will create a framework for understanding
    reputational risk in light of these recent events that may be applicable
    to responding to future incidents."

    In the paper I ask: "If 40 million customer credit card numbers are
    exposed in a security breach at the credit card processor CardSystems, why
    do a significant number of people not cancel their Visa and/or
    Mastercard?"

    Reputational Risk Keynote Presentation:
    http://www.ftusecurity.com/pub/FiTechSummit_final_paper.pdf

    I am concerned that the survey is self-selecting. In other words, the
    people responding to the survey already have a disposition one way or the
    other. Of 51,433 people, only 17.8% (9,154) replied. That means 82.2%
    (42,279) did not reply!

    I'm not a statistician; is 17.8% statistically significant to determine a
    general consensus?

    The papers may not be directly contradictory to one another. Please keep
    that in mind.

    I would be interested to know other's opinions on the matter.

    Sincerely,
    Kenneth F. Belva, CISSP
    http://www.ftusecurity.com


  • Next message: Debasis Mohanty: "Bypassing Personal Firewall (Zone Alarm Pro) Using DDE-IPC"

    Relevant Pages

    • [Full-disclosure] Is the Bottom Line Impacted by Security Breaches?
      ... White and Case, a top NYC law firm, posted a survey on Data Security ... Breach Notifications on September 26, ... showing their displeasure by terminating relationships with the companies ...
      (Full-Disclosure)
    • Re: Food for Thought
      ... >> the spending power of the US ... Look at the Navy-Marine Corps Internet, a contract ... Security is secuirty and penetration means exactly that. ... > You just hit a sore spot w/ me...the CSI/FBI survey. ...
      (comp.security.misc)
    • Re: Food for Thought
      ... >> the spending power of the US ... Look at the Navy-Marine Corps Internet, a contract ... Security is secuirty and penetration means exactly that. ... > You just hit a sore spot w/ me...the CSI/FBI survey. ...
      (comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.security)
    • Re: Food for Thought
      ... >> the spending power of the US ... Look at the Navy-Marine Corps Internet, a contract ... Security is secuirty and penetration means exactly that. ... > You just hit a sore spot w/ me...the CSI/FBI survey. ...
      (microsoft.public.win2000.security)
    • =?windows-1252?Q?TJX=92s_failure_to_secure_Wi-Fi_could?= =?windows-1252?Q?_cost_=241B?=
      ... TJX’s failure to secure Wi-Fi could cost $1B ... already widely reported back in March that the TJ Maxx breach was ... IPLocks, a compliance and database security company, is basing the ... WEP was originally demonstrated to be broken back in 2001 and it was ...
      (soc.retirement)