
"As the cyber landscape evolves and grows increasingly connected, the partnerships, tools and flexible device practices we depend on can also become weak points. For instance, the very third parties businesses rely on for operations can expose them to risks in the event of a cyber incident. Likewise, as artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more prevalent, it also accelerates cyber threats, and while bring-you-own-device (BYOD) policies can help employees work with more flexibility, they may cost the company in terms of risk."
"Hutchins directs the firm's Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Team, advises multi-national corporations regarding federal and state data privacy compliance, and is recognized as a Certified Information Privacy Professional/United States (CIPP/US) by the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). Furthermore, as a cybersecurity and data privacy attorney, Botkin has experience in examining and mitigating enterprise risks associated with privacy and cybersecurity."
The increasing connectivity of systems, third-party tools, and flexible device practices creates additional cyber vulnerabilities. Third-party service providers with access to customer, employee, or critical business information can expose organizations to significant operational and legal risk. Artificial intelligence adoption accelerates cyber threats by expanding attack surfaces and enabling more sophisticated attacks. Bring-your-own-device policies increase exposure when personal devices access corporate networks and data. Cyber incidents arising from these factors can trigger regulatory, contractual, and litigation consequences. Federal and state data privacy compliance and proactive enterprise risk mitigation are essential to manage these legal exposures.
Read at Securitymagazine
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