Kentucky Enacts a Data Breach Notification Law and Protects Student Data in the Cloud


Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear signed H.R. 232 on April 10, 2014, making the Commonwealth the 47th state to enact a data breach notification law. The law also limits how cloud service providers can use student data. A breach notification law in New Mexico may follow shortly.

Data Breach Notification Mandate

The Kentucky law follows the same general structure of many of the breach notification laws in the other states:

Protections for Student Data In the Cloud

The law is designed to protect student data at educational institutions, public or private, including any administrative units, that serve students in kindergarten through grade twelve when stored in the “cloud”. We may see more of these kinds of laws, particularly in light of the Fordham Law School study on the topic. For purposes of this law, “student data” means

any information or material, in any medium or format, that concerns a student and is created or provided by the student in the course of the student’s use of cloud computing services, or by an agent or employee of the educational institution in connection with the cloud computing services. Student data includes the student’s name, email address, email messages, postal address, phone number, and any documents, photos, or unique identifiers relating to the student.

Cloud providers serving these institutions in Kentucky need to be aware of this law not only so they can take steps to comply, but because it requires the providers to certify in their services contracts with the educational institutions that the providers will comply with this new law.

Specifically, the law prohibits cloud computing service providers from “processing student data for any purpose other than providing, improving, developing, or maintaining the integrity of its cloud computing services, unless the provider receives express permission from the student’s parent.” Processing is defined pretty broadly, it means to “use, access, collect, manipulate, scan, modify, analyze, transform, disclose, store, transmit, aggregate, or dispose of student data.”

While the provider may assist an educational institution with certain research permitted under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, also known as “FERPA,” it may not use the data to “advertise or facilitate advertising or to create or correct an individual or household profile for any advertisement purpose.” Finally, the provider may not sell, disclose, or otherwise process student data for any commercial purpose.


Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2025
National Law Review, Volume IV, Number 103