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Wednesday, September 22 • 10:50am - 11:10am
Do Data Breaches Damage Reputation? Evidence from 45 Companies Between 2002 and 2018

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Link to full paper

Abstract:
While data breaches have become more common, there is little evidence that companies that incur them experience a persistent decline in financial performance or security prices. Using new firm-level data between 2002 and 2018, this paper finds that firms experience a 26-29% increase in intangible capital following an average data breach. However, the largest and most salient breaches are associated with a 5-9% decline in intangible capital following a data breach. These effects are concentrated among firms in consumer-facing industries: smaller (larger) data breaches are associated with more positive (negative) effects on intangible capital. These results suggest that current regulatory guidance may not provide complete incentives for firms to invest in cybersecurity capabilities, particularly for small to medium size breaches.

Moderators
avatar for Marjory Blumenthal

Marjory Blumenthal

MSBlumenthal, LLC
TPRC veteran w/Internet and cybersecurity interests, expanded to automated vehicles, safety, and other issues relating to uses of AI, mobile, IOT...

Authors
avatar for Christos Makridis

Christos Makridis

Stanford University
Christos serves as a Senior Adviser for the National Artificial Intelligence Institute at the Department of Veterans Affairs, a Research Professor at the W. P. Carey School of Business in Arizona State University, a Digital Fellow at the Initiative at the Digital Economy in the MIT... Read More →


Wednesday September 22, 2021 10:50am - 11:10am EDT
Room #5