New Guidance: Responding to a data breach

New Guidance: Responding to a data breach

For any organization connected to the internet, it is not a question of if but when their business will be under attack, according to a recent cybersecurity report from Symantec. These increasing attacks put customer information, and especially payment data at risk for compromise. When breaches do occur, response time continues to be a challenge. In more than one quarter of all breaches investigated worldwide in 2014 by Verizon, it took victim organization weeks, or even months, to contain the breaches. It is against this backdrop that global cybersecurity, payment technology and data forensics experts are gathering in Vancouver today for the annual PCI North America Community Meeting to address the ongoing challenge of protecting consumer payment information from criminals, and new best practices on how organizations can best prepare for responding to a data breach.

A data breach now costs organizations an average total of $3.8 million. However, research shows that having an incident response team in place can create significant savings. Developed in collaboration with the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Forensic Investigators (PFI) community, Responding to a Data Breach: A How-to Guide for Incident Management provides merchants and service providers with key recommendations for being prepared to react quickly if a breach is suspected, and specifically what to do contain damage, and facilitate an effective investigation

These best practices will be part of discussions at this week’s meeting in the context of today’s threat and breach landscape, along with other standards and resources the industry is developing to help businesses protect their customer payment data.

Check out the best practices here!

Want to follow the conversation live from the Community Meeting? Join @PCISSC on Twitter using #PCICM.

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