Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey has unveiled a new online portal to let businesses and organizations report data breaches.
The Democrat said the online portal should make it easier to alert her office to the potential theft of information.
Since November 2007, the attorney general’s office has received notice of more than 21,000 breaches, with 3,821 breaches reported in 2017 affecting more than 3.2 million residents.
Healey says data breaches can put Massachusetts residents at risk of identity theft and financial fraud.
State law requires any entity that owns or licenses a consumer’s personal information to notify the attorney general’s office any time personal information is compromised.
Data breaches can be due to intentional hacking or human error, such as sending an email to the wrong person or losing a laptop.
Topics Cyber Massachusetts
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Zurich Insurance Profit Beats Estimates as CEO Eyes Beazley
Florida Regulators Crack the Whip on Auto Warranty Firm, Fake Certificates of Insurance
Jury Finds Johnson & Johnson Liable for Cancer in Latest Talc Trial
Judge Tosses Buffalo Wild Wings Lawsuit That Has ‘No Meat on Its Bones’ 

