Categories: Articles

What a Company Needs to Think about to Become Compliant

What a Company Needs to Think about to Become Compliant

Federal Statutes

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act:
Requiring every business who accesses or uses a customer”s personal financial information to issue a privacy statement that notifies its customers “in clear and conspicuous language” on an annual basis how that information is collected and used and to comply with its stated privacy policy to protect the privacy of such information;

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act:
Requiring every business who accesses or uses an individual”s protected health information to issue a privacy statement that notifies such individuals on an annual basis how that information is collected and used and to comply with its stated privacy policy to protect the privacy of such information;

The Sarbanes Oxley Act:
Requiring accountants who audit or review Financial Statements for a business to retain certain business records relating to that audit or review; and imposing criminal liability on any business that engages in document destruction, even nbso if such document destruction occurs before the business has any formal notice of an official proceeding, and without the necessity of proving a bad intent for the destruction, i.e., a “corrupt persuasion.”

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC):
A 1997 amendment to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Act requires financial institutions to keep records of digital communications between broker/dealers and customers. Records must be stored on media that are not subject to change, are easily accessible for the first two years and retains unchanged for no fewer than six years.

What is required to be compliant?
Regulations today require a company”s top management to:

(a) Affirm their ultimate responsibility for the company”s internal financial controls in writing in their annual report;
(b) Provide an assessment of and attest to the effectiveness of those controls; and
(c) Obtain a separate report from a third-party auditor evaluating and validating management”s assessment of the company”s controls. To achieve this it will be critical to have controls, policies and procedures in place and documented.

  • What does this mean for business today?
    Email is no longer a novelty to conduct business today for small or large, privately owned or publicly traded companies
  • Email is considered admissible as a business record in a court of law by way of defense against litigation
eMazzanti Technologies

Recent Posts

How to Manage Remote Workers

With a global customer base, eMazzanti Technologies positions engineers and project managers in various locations…

4 years ago

Tips for Transitioning to Remote Work

Over a period of three weeks, most of the workforce in the United States found…

4 years ago

Collaborate with Exceptional Security and Privacy Using Microsoft 365 for Remote Work

Three years ago, Microsoft launched Teams, a powerful component of Office 365 (now Microsoft 365),…

4 years ago

You Look Marvelous! The Sprint to Video-based Team Interaction

In our new work-from-home (WFH) world, the requirement for on demand video conferencing has exploded…

4 years ago

5 Endpoint Security Best Practices When Remote Work Takes Center Stage

With the majority of employees working from home this spring, organizations have encountered new challenges.…

4 years ago

Cloud-based Security Solutions Deliver Powerful, Scalable Protection for SMBs

The average small to medium business (SMB) has most likely migrated at least some essential…

4 years ago