How increased online and electronic activity exposes congregations to new risks.
Bobby Ross Jr.
Last Reviewed: April 7, 2020
For consumers, recent news stories are frightening—and increasingly familiar:
- A massive data breach involving the credit reporting agency Equifax exposed millions of Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, names, and dates of birth.
- The web service provider Yahoo acknowledged that a data breach touched 3 billion of its accounts—three times as many as originally revealed.
On top of this, consider these insights from The Kiplinger Letter:
- Demand for cyber insurance is zooming as the number of cyberattacks rises. Cyber policies cover financial losses from a range of attacks, from data theft to digital extortion. The average total cost for a data breach was more than $7 million in 2017. The ...
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