DocumentCode :
2073159
Title :
Reconciling multi-jurisdictional legal requirements: A case study in requirements water marking
Author :
Gordon, David G. ; Breaux, Travis D.
Author_Institution :
Eng. & Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
24-28 Sept. 2012
Firstpage :
91
Lastpage :
100
Abstract :
Companies that own, license, or maintain personal information face a daunting number of privacy and security regulations. Companies are subject to new regulations from one or more governing bodies, when companies introduce new or existing products into a jurisdiction, when regulations change, or when data is transferred across political borders. To address this problem, we developed a framework called “requirements water marking” that business analysts can use to align and reconcile requirements from multiple jurisdictions (municipalities, provinces, nations) to produce a single high or low standard of care. We evaluate the framework in an empirical case study conducted over a subset of U.S. data breach notification laws that require companies to secure their data and notify consumers in the event of data loss or theft. In this study, applying our framework reduced the number of requirements a company must comply with by 76% across 8 jurisdictions. We show how the framework surfaces critical requirements trade-offs and potential regulatory conflicts that companies must address during the reconciliation process. We summarize our results, including surveys of information technology law experts to contextualize our empirical results in legal practice.
Keywords :
data privacy; information systems; legislation; security of data; watermarking; U.S. data breach notification laws; consumer notification; data loss; data security; information systems; information technology law; license; multijurisdictional legal requirement reconciliation; personal information maintenance; privacy regulations; requirements watermarking; security regulations; theft; Companies; Law; Licenses; Measurement; Standards; conflicts; legal requirements; requirements comparison; requirements reconciliation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Requirements Engineering Conference (RE), 2012 20th IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
ISSN :
1090-750X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2783-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1090-750X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RE.2012.6345843
Filename :
6345843
Link To Document :
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