You'll see this message when it is too late : the legal and economic aftermath of cybersecurity breaches /
Cybersecurity incidents make the news with startling regularity. Each breach, the theft of 145.5 million Americans' information from Equifax, for example, or the Russian government's theft of National Security Agency documents or the Sony Pictures data dump, makes headlines, inspires panic...
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| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
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Cambridge, Massachusetts :
MIT Press,
[2018]
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| Series: | Information policy series.
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- Lessons from financially motivated cybercrimes
- Operation get rich or die trying : how the TJX breach set the stage for a decade of payment card conflict
- "What they aren't telling you is their rules are archaic" : the South Carolina Department of Revenue breach, IRS fraud & identity theft
- The most wanted cybercriminal in the world : gameover zeus, cryptolocker, and the rise of ransomware
- Lessons from cyber espionage
- Certificates gone rogue : the diginotar compromise and the fragile trust infrastructure of the online world
- No doubt to hack you, writed by uglygorilla : China's PLA unit 61398 and economic espionage
- "Decades in the making" : the office of personnel management breach and political espionage
- Lessons from online acts of vengeance
- Operation Stophaus : the Spamhaus denial-of-service attacks
- "An epic nightmare" : the Sony breach and ex-post mitigation
- Imperfect affair : Ashley Madison and the economics of embarrassment
- Who should safeguard our data? : shared responsibility and liability
- "Email the way it should be" : the role of application designers and software developers
- Reasonable security : the role of organizations in protecting their data and networks
- "Happy talk about good ideas" : the role of policy makers in defending computer systems
- Conclusion: it will take all of us
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.