What is 'Reasonable Security?' - David Navetta, Information Law Group


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Feb 24 2010 17 mins   1
When it comes to protecting your organization and your customers from a data breach, what is considered "reasonable security?"

This question is at the center of several ongoing lawsuits, and how the courts answer it may be one of the biggest stories of 2010.

Shedding light on this hot topic is David Navetta, founding partner of the Information Law Group and co-chair of the American Bar Association's Information Security Committee. In an exclusive interview, Navetta discusses:

Current regulatory trends, including the HITECH Act;
Legal issues surrounding "reasonable security;"
How to use existing standards to establish "reasonable security."

Prior to co-founding the Information Law Group, Navetta established InfoSecCompliance LLC ("ISC"), a law firm focusing on information technology-related law. ISC successfully served a wide assortment of U.S. and foreign clients from Fortune 500 companies to small start-ups and service providers. He previously worked for over three years in New York as assistant general counsel for a major insurer's eBusiness Risk Solutions Group. While there he analyzed and forecasted information security, privacy and technology risks, drafted policies to cover such risks, and worked on sophisticated technology transfer transactions. Navetta engaged in commercial litigation for several years prior to going in-house, including working at the Chicago office of Sedgwick, Detert, Moran and Arnold, a large international law firm.

He currently serves as a Co-Chair of the American Bar Association's Information Security Committee, and is also Co-Chair of the PCI Legal Risk and Liability Working Group. He has spoken and written frequently concerning technology, privacy and data security legal issues.