EC-Council: Computer Hacking Forensic Investigator(CHFI-V10) |
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Module 1 : Computer Forensics in Today's World |
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Notes available : 31 |
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Note ID: 128
California SB 1386
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California Senate Bill 1386, or SB 1386, is a law that requires businesses, state agencies, or other entities that own or license computerized data to disclose any security breach to California residents. The law went into effect on July 1, 2003. SB 1386 requires companies to notify California customers if they know or reasonably believe that unencrypted customer information has been stolen. The law does not specify the terms of the notification, but it requires it to be made "in the most expedient time possible and without unreasonable delay"
SB 1386 requires covered parties to disclose any breach of the security of personal data to any California resident.
Covered parties include:
- State agencies
- A person or business
- Anyone that owns or licenses computerized personal information in California
- An individual‘s first name or first initial and last name
- Social security number
- Driver‘s license number or California Identification Card number
- Name, address, account numbers
The substitute notice requires three actions:
- E-mail notice if the company has the e-mail address
- Conspicuous posting of the notice on the company‘s website if it has one
- Notification in a major state-wide media
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