Squire Patton Boggs Data Privacy & Cybersecurity team of global professionals will keep your organization ahead of the curve by keeping you abreast of the legal, regulatory, policy and legislative changes that will impact your business. They advise clients in all the legal, regulatory policy and legislative issues that have substantive impacts on the way the public and private sectors manage information collection, storage, transfer and cybersecurity risks, both before there is a breach and after it has occurred.
Squire Patton Boggs global team works collaboratively across multiple jurisdictions on a diverse range of local, regional and international issues in both developed and emerging markets, operating under very different data protection, privacy and cybersecurity regimes.
Cybersecurity
Squire Patton Boggs global Data Privacy & Cybersecurity team works across borders and practice specialties to deliver comprehensive and strategic advice and counsel on cybersecurity. They address cybersecurity and privacy issues, cyber theft and data breach prevention, as well as the liability stemming from data breaches and post-breach forensics.
Squire Patton Boggs experience with the broad swathe of policy, regulatory, legislative, legal, compliance and enforcement issues that impact risk management and cybersecurity means we can offer valuable and proactive advice to clients in critical infrastructure sectors, such as banking and financial services, energy, telecommunications, information technology and health, along with other industries impacted by cybersecurity concerns.
The Emerging Role of Regulators and Cybersecurity
As cybersecurity risks grow exponentially around the world, regulators across the globe are looking at new ways to manage the risk. We bring a global view of what is happening in the emerging realms of cybersecurity in other countries, including in the EU, Asia Pacific, Latin America and others. In many cases, we can help our global clients anticipate how emerging cybersecurity policies, regulations and laws are being debated around the world, and share best practices about what has worked and what happens. The increasingly connected nature of the globe dictates that corporations need teams like ours who have detailed experience in all of these matters.
As a result, that means we can help clients understand how proposed cyber changes will impact their current – and often complex and overlapping – regulatory regimes. For example, in the US, we work closely with the White House and relevant federal agencies. We also work with independent agencies, including the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and entities like the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), as well as every committee jurisdiction in Congress.
We have similar capabilities in Brussels and key EU member states, as well as in the Asia Pacific region, to help ensure global messaging, coordination and solutions.
More Legal and Business Bylines From Data Privacy & Cybersecurity
- EU and National Guidance and Approaches to Contact Tracing Apps - (Posted On Thursday, June 04, 2020)
- EasyJet Cyber-Attack: How to Avoid an Easy Hack - (Posted On Thursday, May 21, 2020)
- Data Breach Enforcement in the UK and in the EU: Cross-Border Issues - (Posted On Wednesday, March 11, 2020)
- Employee Data Subject Access Requests: Part 3 – DSARs and Proportionality – Limiting the Search - (Posted On Monday, October 29, 2018)
- Employee Data Subject Access Requests: Part 2 – It’s Complicated – Extending the DSAR Deadline (UK) - (Posted On Monday, October 22, 2018)
- Employee Data Subject Access Requests: Part 1 – where are we now and what questions remain? (UK) - (Posted On Monday, October 22, 2018)
- European Data Protection Board Tries to Sort Out the DPIA Disaccord - (Posted On Tuesday, October 09, 2018)
- The GDPR Becomes Law in 365 Days – Three Areas to Start Focusing on Now - (Posted On Thursday, May 25, 2017)
- Possible Relief to Privacy Shield Fears: EU Data Transfers Excluded in New White House Executive Order on Immigration - (Posted On Wednesday, March 08, 2017)
- Article 29 Working Party Provides Guidance on Handling Complaints Under EU-US Privacy Shield - (Posted On Thursday, February 23, 2017)
The National Law Review recognizes the Data Privacy and Security Practice Group at Squire Patton Boggs as a Go-To Thought Leader for their contributions related to Privacy legislation in California. With the year-long implementation of the CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) and the recent CPRA (California Privacy Rights Act), Squire Patton Boggs wrote consistently on CCPA compliance, including updates from the California Attorney General on changes to the CCPA, updates to CCPA Regulations and the progression of the CPRA to the ballot box and eventual law. The articles provided guidance for businesses including health care systems and financial institutions on CCPA compliance. The following NLR authors from Squire Patton Boggs were regular contributors on data privacy and security: Glenn A. Brown, Lydia de la Torre, Elliot Golding, Michael W. Kelly, Lauren Kitces, and Ann J, LaFrance.