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Hawaii Considers Amendments To Data Breach Notification Law

Posted on February 11, 2011 by Dissent

Libbie Canter writes:

Hawaii legislators have introduced several bills to amend the state’s data breach notice law.  Two of these legislative measures would eliminate the “risk of harm” trigger for breach notification in Hawaii.  Currently, notice to Hawaii consumers is required only “where illegal use of the [breached] personal information has occurred, or is reasonably likely to occur and that creates a risk of harm to a person.”

Read more on InsidePrivacy.  Canter summarizes S.B. No. 728, S.B. 796, and S.B. 1162 and their companion bills in the House.


Related:

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  • Shad White’s office finds nearly a third of Mississippi's state agencies fail cybersecurity requirements
  • California hospitals can escape fines if workers expose patient info
  • Two agencies in one state investigated and fined Healthplex. Was that one too many?
  • Ohio law to require local governments to formally approve ransomware payments
Category: State/Local

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