The following was statement was issued today by NYS Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.
Nobody should be forced to worry about the security of their personal information when shopping on Black Friday or Cyber Monday. But the constant barrage of recent hacks and data breaches makes the threat of identity theft all too real.
Just
this week, Uber became the latest company to report a breach -- one
that my office is investigating. We've seen breaches at Target. T.J.
Maxx. Yahoo. Marshalls. eBay. Home Depot. Anthem. And the biggest known
breach of Social Security numbers happened just a few months ago at
Equifax, exposing the personal information of more than 140 million
Americans, including more than 8 million New Yorkers.
These
breaches were outrageous -- and preventable. But there’s good news: the
NY State legislature can pass my legislation -- the SHIELD Act -- to
prevent hacks like these from ever happening again.
New
York's data security laws are toothless and outdated. While cybercrime
has evolved, our laws have stayed the same. If we had stronger standards
in place before the Equifax hack to fix these loopholes, that breach
may have been avoided.
We can't afford to wait for Congress to act. It’s up to us here in New York.
That’s
why I'm asking advocates, businesses, and New Yorkers like you to join
me in calling on New York’s legislators to pass the SHIELD (Stop Hacks
and Improve Electronic Data Security) Act to make our state a national
leader in data security.
Under this bill, companies would be required to: maintain reasonable safeguards for our data: the more sophisticated the company, the more robust the safeguards; and report breaches that expose our
usernames and passwords, biometric data, or private health data -- not
just those breaches that expose social security numbers or other
financial data.
Data
breaches are more frequent than ever. They're jeopardizing our privacy
and our financial information. Stopping them is in everyone’s interest.
Passing the SHIELD Act will enable my office to hold companies
accountable, and make sure New York law finally applies common sense
standards to businesses of all different sizes.
In solidarity,
No comments:
Post a Comment