Confessions of a Plaintiffs Expert
Interhack scientist Bob Mathis will present at the
State of Information Security 2007 Executive Forum in
Columbus, Ohio at the Blackwell Inn on October 23,
2007.
Abstract
If your company's attorneys had to represent to a
court that your organization did not have a particular
record, could they do so correctly and with
confidence?
Corporate information technology (IT) departments are
widely tasked with ensuring that information is always
available when needed by the business. Requirements
for integrity and confidentiality have driven
additional changes in policy for information
management and the mechanisms used to implement such
policy. To a large degree, these matters have widely
been considered “technology” issues and
handled exclusively within the domain of IT
management.
Risk, however, goes far beyond the matter of hostile
actors breaking into systems with sensitive data. With
legal, regulatory, and contractual issues binding the
organization, a failure of effective information
management poses considerable risks to the
organization. The possibility of indictment of
executives and firms, fines paid to regulators, and
settlements paid to plaintiffs weigh on the
consciousness of businesses of all types.
To illustrate how technologists and lawyers need to
work together to identify and to manage risk in the
organization, Matt Curtin will discuss his work as a
forensic computer scientist and a case where his
analysis led to findings contrary to assertions made
by the company sued for violating the privacy of
people using the Web. Attendees should understand the
need for cooperation among disciplines in the
organization and strategies for ensuring success.
About the State of Information Security 2007
The State of Information Security 2007 is a luncheon
and executive-level security forum hosted by Sun
Microsystems, Simplesoft, and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
It will be held in Columbus, Ohio at the Blackwell
Inn on Tuesday, October 23, 2007 from 11:30 a.m. until
4:30 p.m.
To RSVP call Sue Hachten at +1 614 448 4050.
About Interhack
Interhack is a pioneering professional services firm,
active in security and privacy research, with a
forensic computing practice that has been involved in
cutting-edge litigation on electronic privacy
matters.
Established in 2000, Interhack's forensic computing
practice helps in-house counsel, incident response
teams, law enforcement agencies and law firms
establish facts that can be used in litigation or
criminal prosecution.