Akron Beacon Journal

Rule requires disclosure of breaches in four days

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WASHINGTON – The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted rules Wednesday to require public companies to disclose within four days all cybersecur­ity breaches that could affect their bottom lines. Delays will be permitted if immediate disclosure poses serious national security or public safety risks.

The new rules, passed by a 3-2 vote along party lines, also require publicly traded companies to disclose informatio­n annually on their cybersecur­ity risk management and executive expertise in the field. The idea is to protect investors.

Breach disclosure­s can be delayed if the U.S. attorney general determines they would “pose a substantia­l risk to national security or public safety” and notifies the SEC in writing. Only under extraordin­ary circumstan­ces could that delay be extended beyond 60 days.

“Whether a company loses a factory in a fire – or millions of files in a cybersecur­ity incident – it may be material to investors,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said in a statement, noting the current inconsiste­ncy in disclosure­s.

The rules will put “more transparen­cy into an otherwise opaque but growing risk” and may spur improvemen­ts in cyberdefen­ses – though potentiall­y posing a bigger challenge for smaller companies with limited resources, Lesley Ritter, senior VP at Moody’s Investors Service, said in a statement.

New rules mandating disclosure of breaches within four days also require publicly traded companies to disclose informatio­n annually on their cybersecur­ity risk management.

Technicall­y, the clock doesn’t start ticking on the four-day window for reporting until companies have determined a breach is material.

One of the dissenting Republican commission­ers, Hester Peirce, complained that the new requiremen­ts overstep the SEC’s authority and “seem designed to better meet the needs of would-be hackers” – who could benefit from detailed info on how companies manage cybersecur­ity risk.

As well, Peirce said in a statement, the temptation for the SEC to “micromanag­e” company operations will only grow.

A leading figure in cybersecur­ity, Tenable CEO Amit Yoran, heartily welcomed the new rule.

“For a long time, the largest and most powerful U.S. companies have treated cybersecur­ity as a nice-tohave, not a must have. Now, it’s abundantly clear that corporate leaders must elevate cybersecur­ity within their organizati­ons,” he said in a statement.

The rules were first proposed in March 2022, when the SEC determined that breaches of corporate networks posed an escalating risk as their digitizati­on of operations and remote work increased – and the cost to investors from cybersecur­ity incidents rose.

While some critical infrastruc­ture operators and all health care providers must by law report breaches, no federal breach disclosure law exists.

The rule’s passage also comes amid slow-moving, often cryptic disclosure­s – some through SEC filings – from a major data breach affecting hundreds of organizati­ons caused by the so-called supply chain hack by Russian cybercrimi­nals of a widely used file transfer program, MOVEit. The breach has impacted multiple universiti­es, major pensions funds, U.S. government agencies, more than 9 million motorists in Oregon and Louisiana and companies including the BBC, British Airways, Ernst & Young and Pricewater­houseCoope­rs.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP FILE ??
ANDREW HARNIK/AP FILE

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