California Attorney General Releases Report on 2012 Data Breaches


If You Care About the Security of Your Online Data or Just Love Charts, This Report is For You

Californians are a diverse bunch (as you’ve probably gathered from those commercials with Arnold Schwarzenegger), but apparently there is something that 2.5 million of us all have in common.  California Attorney General Kamala Harris has released a first-of-its-kind data breach report  that includes statistics, recommendations and assessments based on breaches that were reported to the Attorney General’s office during the 2012 calendar year.  The most notable/alarming finding is that in 2012, 2.5 million California residents had personal information compromised in connection with a data breach.  That’s roughly equal to the populations of San Diego, San Francisco and Oakland combined.

California was the first to pass a data breach notification law (California Civil Code Sections 1798.29(a) and 1798.82(a)) ten years ago, but 2012 was the first year in which organizations who issue certain types of data breaches were also required to notify the office of the Attorney General.  In total, 131 data breaches were reported  by 103 different entities, with the average breach incident involving 22,500 individuals.   According to the Breach Report, more than half of the breaches involved social security numbers and more than half were the result of intentional acts by an unauthorized individual.   California is the first state to compile a comprehensive review of reported breaches and the results provide important information and other states should take up the example.

The Breach Report includes recommendations for the California legislature and the state’s enforcement agencies, but arguably the most important recommendations are those directed at the providers of online services:

Perhaps the biggest take-away for providers of online services, however, is how common data breaches have become.  The data and statistics included in the report demonstrate that data breaches happen across all industry sectors, in all sizes of companies, with all types of data and in a number of different ways.  The time to prepare your company for a data breach is before it happens, rather than after.  Nobody wants to be on this list, but if you do experience a data breach, having a plan in place will help keep your sleepless nights to a minimum.


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National Law Review, Volume III, Number 186