Canadian Lawyer InHouse

March 2017

Legal news and trends for Canadian in-house counsel and c-suite executives

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15 CANADIANLAWYERMAG.COM/INHOUSE MARCH 2017 ust two days after Christmas this past December, an American company called E-Sports Entertainment Association went through most of the stages that are now common episodes following a cybersecurity attack — with one notable exception. First, ESEA learned a database containing information on its customers had been breached by hackers demanding $100,000. Next, the company informed the FBI, fi xed the IT problem that allowed the hackers to get in and released a statement to the public that it would not give in to the demands. Unlike the headline-making IT security fi ascos involving Target, Yahoo and many other organizations, however, ESEA did not have the power to limit disclosure about exactly how many customers may have had their information compromised. It's all there on LeakedSource, an online service that launched just a few months earlier that not only claims 1.5 million records were stolen by hackers in the ESEA breach but allows individual customers to check if they're among the victims using a Google-like search tool.

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