According to a recent study, the median amount of time between a breach of a company’s cybernetwork and the discovery of that breach is 229 days. Given this lengthy amount of time, companies should consider the benefits of an expanded cyberliability insurance policy period, particularly if the company is switching from one insurance provider to another. As discussed in “Hackers Don’t Care About the Terms of Your Insurance Policy: The Importance of Retroactive Dates and Extended Reporting Periods in Effective Cyberliability Insurance Coverage,” a client alert written by Reed Smith partners Brian Himmel, Andrew Moss, David Weiss and Cristina Shea, two such options for expanding the policy period are retroactive dates (shifting the effective date of coverage back, to capture events that occurred or were occurring but were not yet discovered when the policy was purchased) and extended reporting periods (which provide additional time to report events that are not discovered until after the end of the policy period).
To read the client alert, click here.