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Cyber Insurance

Underwriting, claims, coverage trends, and market shifts.

Edition #97

Preparedness Builds Resilience. Assurance Proves It.

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  • Cybersecurity Dive

    As Cyber Risk Evolves, the Insurance Industry Tightens Guardrails

    This article explains how cyber insurers are responding to worsening risk conditions by imposing stricter underwriting and coverage expectations. Insurance is becoming a stronger driver of security standards, claims discipline, and board-level risk management.

Edition #96

Blind Spots Become Breaches. Adaptability Builds Resilience.

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  • Risk & Insurance

    Ransomware and Third-Party Vendors Drive Highest Cyber Insurance Losses, Willis Report Finds

    The Willis report identifies ransomware as the costliest category of cyber incident, while breaches involving third-party vendors account for a growing proportion of insurance claims. It highlights the need for stronger vendor-risk management, suitable insurance coverage, and ransomware-specific response planning.

Edition #95

AI Expands the Attack Surface. Trust Must Evolve.

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  • Dark Reading

    AI Risk Worries Insurers & Businesses Alike

    Businesses and insurers remain uncertain about how to assess and cover risks created by artificial intelligence. Some insurers are developing specialised policies, while others are excluding AI-related operational losses because of limited historical data.

Edition #94

Cyber Risk Expands. Leadership Must Align.

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  • Security Magazine

    Schrödinger's Vulnerabilities: What Mythos Actually Broke in Cyber Insurance

    The “Mythos” threat has exposed weaknesses in how cyber-insurance policies are underwritten. Static annual assessments and historical loss data are increasingly inadequate for measuring rapidly evolving cybersecurity risks.

Edition #92

Prevention Isn’t Enough. Recovery Preserves Trust.

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  • Insurance Journal

    AI Insurance Is Not Cyber Insurance With Extra Steps

    The article argues that AI-related risks should not simply be treated as conventional cyber risks. Emerging litigation shows that AI can create distinct legal, operational, privacy, and insurance exposures requiring different coverage approaches.