Cyber Risk Management & Insurance

Part 2: Advanced Level Webinar

Description: Cyber risk is dynamic, and so are the cybersecurity measures and insurance products designed to respond to it. As cyber threats evolve, insurers have continually revised both traditional commercial policies and stand‑alone cyber insurance products. Some of these changes expand coverage, while others create traps for the unwary—through application representations, sub‑limits, and exclusions embedded in defined terms. At the same time, the claims environment has grown markedly more adversarial. Disputes that once rarely surfaced are now common, requiring policyholders to fight harder to secure the coverage they believed they purchased.

Compounding these challenges, the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence and the proliferation of state privacy laws modeled in part on the GDPR have significantly expanded obligations related to data protection, privacy, and disclosure. Insurance remains a critical component of any cyber risk management strategy, but the cyber insurance marketplace lacks uniformity, and policy quality varies widely. Policyholders must therefore be sophisticated consumers at both placement and renewal, while continuing to devote substantial resources to preventing and responding to cyber incidents.

This webinar will examine emerging cyber risk exposures—including AI-related liabilities, pixel‑tracking claims, system damage, and business interruption—and the insurance coverage disputes arising from those risks. The program will address both first‑party and third‑party coverage issues, as well as enforcement and regulatory developments involving state attorneys general and federal agencies, including the FTC, SEC, HHS, the Department of the Treasury, and the New York Department of Financial Services. Attendees will gain practical insight into how these regulatory actions intersect with cyber and traditional commercial insurance policies, and how policyholders can better position themselves to protect coverage in an increasingly contested landscape.

Agenda:

  • Understand new and developing risk vectors.
  • Understand underwriting challenges, including the purchase and renewal processes for dedicated cyber insurance products.
  • Understand developments with 3rd party insurance products, including wrongful tracking and privacy claims.
  • Understand developments with 1st party insurance products, including system damage and business interruption losses.
  • Understand challenges in navigating the claims handling process and ADR issues that can arise.

As always, if you have comments or wish to participate in one our projects please drop us a note at Editor@LitigationConferences.com.

Available now to CeriFi LegalEdge subscribers. Don’t subscribe? Don’t despair. Use code HB20 for 20% off. Or, HBSub20 for 20% off a full solo subscription. While supplies last.

Miranda Jannuzzi
Miranda JannuzziSenior Vice President, Aon
Miranda Jannuzzi is Senior Vice President on Aon’s Cyber Solutions E&O/Cyber Product team, where she focuses on cyber insurance product innovation and risk transfer solutions for clients. Previously counsel at an Am Law 50 firm, she spent more than a decade representing corporate policyholders in insurance coverage disputes and recovery matters across multiple industries. Miranda earned her J.D. from Temple University Beasley School of Law and is licensed in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
Joshua Gold
Joshua GoldShareholder, Anderson Kill
Joshua Gold is a shareholder in Anderson Kill’s New York office representing corporate and nonprofit policyholders in insurance recovery matters. He has secured more than $1.5 billion in recoveries for clients and writes regularly on insurance issues, including a column in Risk Management Magazine. Josh is an adjunct professor of insurance law at Brooklyn Law School and president of Interleges, an international alliance of independent law firms.
Luma S. Al-Shibib
Luma S. Al-ShibibShareholder, Anderson Kill
Luma S. Al-Shibib is a shareholder in Anderson Kill’s New York office and co-chair of the firm’s Cybersecurity and Cyber Insurance Recovery Groups. She focuses on insurance recovery for corporate policyholders, including cyber liability, crime, and D&O coverage, and has secured more than $100 million in recoveries for clients. Luma earned her J.D. from Brooklyn Law School and her B.A., cum laude, from Connecticut College.