Why cyberinsurance has not improved cybersecurity and what governments
can do to make it a more effective tool for cyber risk management. As
cybersecurity incidents—ranging from data breaches and
denial-of-service attacks to computer fraud and ransomware—become
more common, a cyberinsurance industry has emerged to provide coverage
for any resulting liability, business interruption, extortion
payments, regulatory fines, or repairs. In this book, Josephine Wolff
offers the first comprehensive history of cyberinsurance, from the
early “Internet Security Liability” policies in the late 1990s to
the expansive coverage offered today. Drawing on legal records,
government reports, cyberinsurance policies, and interviews with
regulators and insurers, Wolff finds that cyberinsurance has not
improved cybersecurity or reduced cyber risks. Wolff examines the
development of cyberinsurance, comparing it to other insurance
sectors, including car and flood insurance; explores legal disputes
between insurers and policyholders about whether cyber-related losses
were covered under policies designed for liability, crime, or property
and casualty losses; and traces the trend toward standalone
cyberinsurance policies and government efforts to regulate and promote
the industry. Cyberinsurance, she argues, is ineffective at curbing
cybersecurity losses because it normalizes the payment of online
ransoms, whereas the goal of cybersecurity is the opposite—to
disincentivize such payments to make ransomware less profitable. An
industry built on modeling risk has found itself confronted by new
technologies before the risks posed by those technologies can be fully
understood.
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Rethinking Risk in an Age of Ransomware, Computer Fraud, Data Breaches, and Cyberattacks
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780262370769
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter