Content area

Abstract

In the United States, identity theft resulted in corporate and consumer losses of $56 billion dollars in 2005, with up to 35 percent of known identity thefts caused by corporate data breaches. Many states have responded by adopting data breach disclosure laws that require firms to notify consumers if their personal information has been lost or stolen. Although the laws are expected to reduce identity theft, their effect has yet to be empirically measured. We use panel data from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission to estimate the impact of data breach disclosure laws on identity theft from 2002 to 2009. We find that adoption of data breach disclosure laws reduce identity theft caused by data breaches, on average, by 6.1 percent. (Contains 6 tables, 7 figures and 20 footnotes.)

Details

Title
Do Data Breach Disclosure Laws Reduce Identity Theft?
Author
Romanosky, Sasha; Telang, Rahul; Acquisti, Alessandro
Pages
256-286
Publication year
2011
ISSN
0276-8739
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
864941200