Cybersecurity Risk and Insurance Are...
While classroom courses are currently unavailable, Big I NJ still offers tailored in-house classes for your agency. Additionally, you can earn CE credits by attending ABEN or select CEP webinars. My Agency Campus continues to support your agency's employee onboarding, training, and advancement. Please feel free to contact us at any time with questions. Please be advised that our calendar does not support Interent Explorer and you will not be able to register using this browser. For the best browser experience, we recommend you use Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox or Safari. Cybersecurity Risk and Insurance Are...Monday, November 10, 2025DescriptionAre you NEW to ABEN? Use Code 1stABEN40 at checkout to receive your 40% discount! It can be used on the purchase of multiple classes, as long as they are included in the same transaction. ABEN offers high-quality CE and professional development Webcasts via live-streaming video.
The first of the four seminar parts details how many small insureds are not prepared for the risk of a cyber-attack. It also explains how this risk has been increased or accelerated with the developments in 2020, with more business being conducted via email and on e-platforms such as GoToMeeting and Zoom. The second section discusses cybersecurity legal requirements. The theme of this area is that there are multiple laws that may affect clients, depending on what industry they are in. However, there is a degree of consistency in these various laws that can help when a producer is advising about risk. The conceptually consistent principles of cybersecurity law are discussed in two ways. Amplifying this legal aspect of the cybersecurity risk, the third section shifts focus to third-party liabilities and lawsuits. It draws on “real world” exposure from a data breach, the new California Consumer Privacy Act, and the coming tide of biometric protection statutes. The final portion of the hour turns to the ongoing struggle over the scope of cybersecurity coverage by focusing on a pair of recent coverage decisions. The two decisions: (a) illustrate the possible gaps in coverage; and (b) examine ways in which the policy language itself might be “undone” or overridden by promotional assurances of coverage. Thus, the seminar can address the errors and omissions implications for this field. Finally, other decisions in this field are mentioned, along with the interesting question of whether coverage may be precluded by the “acts of war” exclusion existing in so many policies. Approved for 1 NJCE Credit
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