March 17, 2014- chronicle.com

Data Breaches Put a Dent in Colleges’ Finances as Well as Reputations


At Indiana U.’s data center, in Bloomington, staff members were aghast to learn 
that the university was 
among several in recent weeks to come upon security 
breaches in their information-technology operations.

By Megan O’Neil

The costs of a cyberattack on the University of Maryland that was made public 
last month will run into the millions of dollars, according to data-security 
professionals who work in higher education. Such a financial and reputational 
wallop threatens many colleges that are vulnerable to serious data breaches, 
experts say.

Crystal Brown, chief communications officer at Maryland, says an investigation 
into the theft of 309,079 student and personnel records, dating to 1998, is 
being led by the U.S. Secret Service. As part of its response, the university 
has contracted with outside forensics experts and is notifying all affected 
individuals. It is also providing five years’ worth of free credit-protection 
services to all those affected.

A tally of costs related to the breach is not yet available, Ms. Brown says. 
But several data-security professionals interviewed by The Chronicle say the 
total will reach seven figures.

"You are talking about 300,000 people spread across the continental U.S. and 
you offered them all credit monitoring, and you had a lawyer, and you had an IT 
forensics firm—my very conservative estimate would be a couple million 
dollars," says Paul G. Nikhinson, a manager of privacy-breach-response services 
with the Beazley Group, which sells cybersecurity insurance to colleges.

The Maryland case is one of several data-security breaches reported by colleges 
in recent weeks. On February 25, Indiana University said a staff error had left 
information on 146,000 students exposed for 11 months. A week later, the North 
Dakota University system reported that a server containing the information of 
291,465 former, current, and aspiring students and 784 employees had been 
hacked.

Few institutions budget in advance for data breaches, according to college 
officials and data-security professionals. Cybersecurity insurance in higher 
education remains a rarity, despite a consensus among those working in the 
field that the likelihood of such a breach involves "when," not "if."

The list of potential expenses is long. It includes forensics consultants, 
lawyers, call centers, websites, mailings, identity-protection and credit-check 
services, and litigation. Breaches can prompt major campus projects, such as 
risk-management reviews, campuswide encryption, and tests to determine how 
vulnerable networks are.

"For the organization itself, it is like a multiheaded hydra," Mr. Nikhinson 
says. "There are so many things going on at once. Depending on the 
characteristics of the event, there are usually five or six expensive things 
that are going to make up the response process."

Price tags vary depending on the nature of the incident—where and how the 
breach occurred and the number of records affected. The capacity of in-house 
information-technology and communications staffs also figures heavily in the 
final bill. Contracting for outside help typically means additional costs 
starting in the tens of thousands of dollars.

"The first thing you might think about is forensics," says Cathy Bates, chief 
information officer at Appalachian State University and a member of the Higher 
Education Information Security Council. "Do you have the capability to do it 
in-house, or will you need to call in forensics expertise? That might be your 
first outlay of cash. It can be expensive. But again, it really depends on the 
type of security breach that you are working with."

Timothy P. Ryan, managing director of the cyber-investigations practice at 
Kroll Inc. and a former FBI agent, says he has worked on some forensics 
investigations at colleges that were completed in two weeks and others that 
took months.

Hiring an outside forensics team to investigate a small breach can be done for 
"under $50,000," he says, with costs for larger incidents escalating from there.

Data breaches in higher education cost colleges an average of $111 per record—a 
figure that calculates in the damage to the institution’s reputation—according 
to a 2013 study published by the Ponemon Institute, which studies cybersecurity 
and data protection. The average per-record cost across industries including 
government, health care, and retail is $136, the study found. Titled "2013 Cost 
of Data Breach Study: Global Analysis," the report included 277 organizations 
in nine countries and focused on breaches involving 1,000 to 100,000 records.

"There are probably a lot of data breaches in higher education that go 
undetected, probably more so than in other industries," says Larry Ponemon, 
founder and chairman of the institute. "The universities are  not aware of data 
leakage and the harm that can result. It can cost universities a lot of money."

Indiana University has spent about $75,000 on an information call center since 
officials announced its security lapse, says a spokesman, Mark Land. The 
university also spent about $6,200 mailing notifications  to 6,200 affected 
people for whom it did not have email addresses. Staff time spent on the 
security lapse has totaled about 700 hours, Mr. Land says. The university does 
not budget for potential data breaches and does not have cybersecurity 
insurance, he adds.

"While this will end up costing the university from a financial standpoint, our 
biggest concern is making sure we do everything we can to answer questions and 
to provide support for those affected by the potential data exposure," he says, 
"and to ensure that we strengthen our processes so that this sort of thing does 
not happen again.".

Linda Donlin, at the North Dakota University system, says the forensics 
investigation there was done at no cost to the university by the Multi-State 
Information Sharing and Analysis Center, which serves state, local, tribal, and 
territorial governments. The university system is spending about $200,000 on 
identity-theft protection services and a call center, she says.

Costs related to data-security lapses dating to 2011 at the Maricopa County 
Community College District, in Arizona, could climb to $17.1-million, says Tom 
Gariepy, a district spokesman. Trustees have approved contracts including 
$2.25-million for Oracle to repair the network, up to $2.7-million in legal 
expenses, and up to $7-million for notification and credit-monitoring services, 
among other costs. He also  confirms that the district has received notice of a 
class-action lawsuit.

Breaches Kept Mum

High-profile data breaches cost institutions more than dollars and cents, 
according to college officials and data-security experts. There are also what 
some describe as "opportunity losses" and "reputational costs." These can 
include the embarrassment of having to explain an incident to parents, alumni, 
trustees, and prospective students.

Mr. Ryan, the Kroll investigator, notes that in many states, reporting 
requirements center on credit-card, health-care, and personally identifiable 
information. Cases involving theft of research and intellectual property by 
foreign hackers are often kept mum, he says.

The public hears of no more than about half of all data breaches that occur at 
colleges and universities in the United States, Mr. Ryan estimates.

"When it comes to higher education, a lot of it is reputation," says Mr. Ryan. 
"The Ivy Leagues have a certain reputation to maintain. If they are besieged by 
a number of breaches, there is a loss of reputation there. For the same reason 
schools want winning sports teams, they don’t want to be that school that is 
constantly getting breached."

Cynthia J. Larose, an attorney in Boston with the firm Mintz Levin who advises 
colleges on data-security-breach compliance and response, says reputational 
costs are real but hard to pin down.

"It is probably much harder for institutions of higher ed to quantify than it 
is for retailers, because retailers can see it in their stock price, they can 
see it in their sales," Ms. Larose says. "Target can directly track a drop in 
fourth-quarter sales," she says, referring to a case in which hackers accessed 
as many as 40 million debit-card and credit-card accounts used in the 
retailer’s transactions from November 27 to December 15, 2013.

"Will enrollment drop at the University of Maryland because of this?" she says 
of the recent breach there. "I kind of doubt it. The alumni-fund-raising office 
might see a downturn in giving—I don’t know. That would be an interesting 
metric to track."

Keeping Costs Down

Cybersecurity insurance is both expensive and hard to get, says Ms. Bates, of 
Appalachian State.

"The experience that I have had a couple of times in working with insurance 
companies that offer cyberinsurance is that they have a checklist of what you 
need to show you have in place with your security practices," she says.

"Very often you have to have such a strong security posture before you can even 
be allowed to get the insurance that it would take you a lot of work on your 
part to be able to even be eligible."

She does see many colleges working to build in-house forensics expertise, or to 
establish channels through which to reach out and get it quickly should the 
need arise.

One way to keep costs down is to have standing relationships and contracts with 
service companies that can be activated if an incident occurs, Ms. Bates says, 
noting that many colleges and universities already have such arrangements in 
place.

As much as they keep those responsible for colleges’ data security up at night, 
news of significant data breaches can help information-technology and 
data-security officials make their case with top administrators and trustees.

"It can’t be a conversation that is led by the IT department, and too often it 
is," says Joseph Krause, a managing director at Coalfire Systems Inc., an 
information-technology-security firm that works with higher-education clients.

"So this kind of notice, this kind of public exposure for a high-profile 
breach, helps elevate the conversation out of the IT group and into the 
executive level and into the boardroom."

Those working on data-security issues in higher education say they have a 
particularly challenging task in preserving the open, accessible culture 
characteristic of the American university while also establishing strong 
security.

They expect to see more headlines in the coming months like the ones out of 
Maryland. The problem of data breaches in higher education, many say, is likely 
to get worse.

"Higher ed is an active target," Ms. Bates says.

"It is not like people are accidentally happening upon us. They are actively 
pursuing us and trying to get our data."

"I think all of us are actively looking at ways to not only be preventive but 
to deal with this in the best possible way that we can," she says. "You feel 
the weight of the whole situation your shoulders. You really want to try and 
create the best outcome you can for anyone who may be impacted, as well as for 
the university."




















----------------------------------
s. e. anderson
author of The Black Holocaust for Beginners
www.blackeducator.org
www.blackeducator.blogspot.com
If WORK was good for you, the rich would leave none for the poor. (Haiti) 
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