A National Priority and a Business Priority
Like pollution, an insecure infrastructure is bad for everyone. Disclosing security breaches reintroduces the public's collective interest.
Disclosure Plays Into Hackers’ Hands
By requiring companies to disclose security breaches, we would be requiring them to telegraph their weaknesses to the world.
Investors Need to Know
It’s not that the events aren’t happening. It’s that you're not being told about them -- despite the S.E.C.'s instructions.
We Need Better Notification Laws
Existing laws focus mainly on whether a breach exposed information, not why it happened. Yet the reason can be critical.
More Disclosure Is Not Always Better
People may exaggerate the risk of hacking if they suddenly start hearing about a lot of it. Or they may get used to frequent reports and underestimate the risks.
Improve Digital Hygiene
As a nation we devote few resources to creating a common social understanding of how to keep people and computer systems safe.
Room for Debate: Should Companies Tell Us When They Get Hacked?
This article
Room for Debate: Should Companies Tell Us When They Get Hacked?
can be opened in url
http://newsknower.blogspot.com/2013/02/room-for-debate-should-companies-tell.html
Room for Debate: Should Companies Tell Us When They Get Hacked?