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Additionally, if a licensee knows that a cybersecurity event has or may have
occurred, the bill requires that the licensee conduct a prompt investigation to assess
the nature and scope of the event and take related actions, including the performance
of reasonable measures to restore the security of affected information systems. If the
cybersecurity event involves an information system maintained by a third-party
service provider, the licensee must comply with the investigation requirements or
make reasonable efforts to confirm that the service provider has either complied with
the requirements or failed to cooperate with the investigation.
Under the bill, a licensee must notify the commissioner of a cybersecurity event
if either of the following conditions is met:
1. The licensee is domiciled in Wisconsin and the cybersecurity event has a
reasonable likelihood of materially harming a Wisconsin resident or a material part
of the licensee's normal operations.
2. The licensee reasonably believes that the cybersecurity event involves the
nonpublic information of at least 250 Wisconsin residents, and the cybersecurity
event either must be reported to a government entity under federal or state law or
has a reasonable likelihood of materially harming a Wisconsin resident or a material
part of the licensee's normal operations.
The notification must provide specified information about the cybersecurity
event, including details about the event and its discovery, a description of the
accessed nonpublic information, the number of affected Wisconsin residents, and the
licensee's efforts to address the circumstances that allowed the event to occur. The
licensee is required to update the commissioner on material changes to the
information and as additional information becomes available. If the cybersecurity
event involves a third-party service provider, the licensee must notify the
commissioner of the event unless the service provider does so.

Under the bill, the commissioner has the power to examine and investigate the
affairs of a licensee to determine whether a violation of any of the above requirements
has occurred. A licensee must generally keep records relating to the requirements
for at least five years and produce them upon demand of the commissioner. Any
documents, materials, and other information from a licensee that are in the
possession or control of the commissioner are confidential and privileged.
For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as
an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB160,1 1Section 1. 601.465 (3) (f) of the statutes is created to read:
SB160,3,32 601.465 (3) (f) All information protected under s. 601.955, which is subject only
3to the confidentiality provisions in s. 601.955.
SB160,2 4Section 2 . Subchapter IX (title) of chapter 601 [precedes 601.95] of the
5statutes is created to read:
SB160,3,66 Chapter 601
SB160,3,77 Subchapter IX
SB160,3,88 Insurance data security
SB160,3 9Section 3. 601.95 of the statutes is created to read:
SB160,3,10 10601.95 Definitions. In this subchapter:
SB160,3,13 11(1) “Authorized individual” means an individual who is known to and screened
12by a licensee and whose access to the licensee's information system or nonpublic
13information is determined by the licensee to be necessary and appropriate.
SB160,3,15 14(2) “Consumer” means an individual who is a resident of this state and whose
15nonpublic information is in the possession, custody, or control of a licensee.
SB160,4,2 16(3) “Cybersecurity event” means an event resulting in the unauthorized access
17to, or disruption or misuse of, an information system or the nonpublic information

1stored on an information system, except that a “cybersecurity event” does not include
2any of the following:
SB160,4,53 (a) The unauthorized acquisition of encrypted nonpublic information if the
4encryption process or key is not also acquired, released, or used without
5authorization.
SB160,4,86 (b) The unauthorized acquisition of nonpublic information if the licensee
7determines that the nonpublic information has not been used or released and has
8been returned to the licensee or destroyed.
SB160,4,10 9(4) “Encrypted” means the transformation of data into a form that results in
10a low probability of assigning meaning without the use of a protective process or key.
SB160,4,13 11(5) “Information security program” means the administrative, technical, and
12physical safeguards that a licensee uses to access, collect, distribute, process, protect,
13store, use, transmit, dispose of, or otherwise handle nonpublic information.
SB160,4,18 14(6) “Information system” means a discrete set of electronic information
15resources organized for the collection, processing, maintenance, use, sharing,
16dissemination, or disposition of nonpublic information, as well as any specialized
17system, including an industrial or process controls system, telephone switching and
18private branch exchange system, and environmental control system.
SB160,4,23 19(7) “Licensee” means a person licensed, authorized, or registered, or a person
20required to be licensed, authorized, or registered, under chs. 600 to 655, other than
21a purchasing or risk retention group that is chartered and licensed in another state
22or a person acting as an assuming insurer that is domiciled in another state or
23jurisdiction.
SB160,4,25 24(8) “Multifactor authentication” means authentication through verification of
25at least 2 of the following types of authentication factors:
SB160,5,1
1(a) Knowledge factor, including a password.
SB160,5,22 (b) Possession factor, including a token or text message on a mobile phone.
SB160,5,33 (c) Inherence factor, including a biometric characteristic.
SB160,5,6 4(9) “Nonpublic information” means electronic information in the possession,
5custody, or control of a licensee that is not publicly available information and is any
6of the following:
SB160,5,87 (a) Information concerning a consumer that can be used to identify the
8consumer, in combination with at least one of the following data elements:
SB160,5,99 1. Social security number.
SB160,5,1010 2. Driver's license number or nondriver identification card number.
SB160,5,1111 3. Financial account number or credit or debit card number.
SB160,5,1312 4. Security code, access code, or password that permits access to a financial
13account.
SB160,5,1414 5. Biometric records.
SB160,5,1815 (b) Information or data, other than information or data regarding age or
16gender, in any form or medium created by or derived from a health care provider or
17a consumer that can be used to identify the consumer and that relates to any of the
18following:
SB160,5,2019 1. The physical, mental, or behavioral health or condition of the consumer or
20a member of the consumer's family.
SB160,5,2121 2. The provision of health care to the consumer.
SB160,5,2222 3. Payment for the provision of health care to the consumer.
SB160,6,2 23(10) “Publicly available information” means information that a licensee has a
24reasonable basis to believe is lawfully made available to the general public from

1federal, state, or local government records, widely distributed media, or disclosures
2required by federal, state, or local law.
SB160,6,6 3(11) “Third-party service provider” means a person other than a licensee who
4contracts with a licensee to maintain, process, or store nonpublic information or is
5otherwise permitted access to nonpublic information through its provision of
6services to the licensee.
SB160,4 7Section 4. 601.951 of the statutes is created to read:
SB160,6,11 8601.951 General provisions. (1) Exclusive state standards. This
9subchapter establishes the exclusive state standards applicable to licensees for data
10security, the investigation of a cybersecurity event, and notification of a
11cybersecurity event to the commissioner.
SB160,6,16 12(2) Exceptions to applicability. (a) This subchapter does not apply to a person
13who is an employee, agent, representative, or designee of a licensee and who is also
14a licensee to the extent that the person is covered by the information security
15program of the other licensee and the other licensee has complied with this
16subchapter on behalf of the person.
SB160,6,2417 (b) A licensee affiliated with a depository institution that maintains an
18information security program in compliance with the interagency guidelines
19establishing information security standards as set forth pursuant to 15 USC 6801
20and 6805 shall be considered to meet the requirements of this subchapter, provided
21that the licensee produces, upon request of the commissioner, documentation
22satisfactory to the commissioner that independently validates the adoption by the
23affiliated depository institution of an information security program that satisfies the
24interagency guidelines.
SB160,7,4
1(c) This subchapter, except for s. 601.954 (1), does not apply to a licensee who
2is subject to and governed by 45 CFR Parts 160 and 164 and who maintains nonpublic
3information in the same manner as protected health information under 45 CFR
4Parts 160
and 164.
SB160,7,65 (d) If a licensee ceases to qualify for an exception under par. (a) to (c), the
6licensee shall have 180 days to comply with this subchapter.
SB160,7,10 7(3) Agreements between parties. Nothing in this subchapter shall prevent or
8abrogate an agreement between a licensee and another licensee, a 3rd-party service
9provider, or another party to fulfill any of the requirements under s. 601.953 or
10601.954.
SB160,7,13 11(4) Private cause of action. This subchapter may not be construed to create
12or imply a private cause of action for violation of its provisions or to curtail a private
13cause of action that otherwise exists in the absence of this subchapter.
SB160,7,15 14(5) Rules. The commissioner may promulgate rules that are necessary to carry
15out the provisions of this subchapter.
SB160,5 16Section 5. 601.952 of the statutes is created to read:
SB160,7,24 17601.952 Information security program. (1) Implementation of program.
18No later than one year after the effective date of this subsection .... [LRB inserts
19date], a licensee shall develop, implement, and maintain a comprehensive written
20information security program based on the licensee's risk assessment under sub. (2)
21and consistent with the conditions of sub. (3) (a). The program shall contain
22administrative, technical, and physical safeguards for the protection of the licensee's
23information systems and nonpublic information. The licensee shall design the
24program to do all of the following:
SB160,8,2
1(a) Protect against threats and hazards to the security and integrity of the
2information systems and nonpublic information.
SB160,8,53 (b) Protect against unauthorized access to and use of nonpublic information
4and minimize the likelihood of harm to a consumer from the unauthorized access or
5use.
SB160,8,86 (c) Establish and periodically reevaluate a schedule for retention and disposal
7of nonpublic information and establish a mechanism for the destruction of nonpublic
8information that is no longer needed.
SB160,8,10 9(2) Risk assessment. The licensee shall conduct a risk assessment under which
10the licensee shall do all of the following:
SB160,8,1411 (a) Identify reasonably foreseeable internal and external threats that could
12result in unauthorized access to or transmission, disclosure, misuse, alteration, or
13destruction of nonpublic information, including nonpublic information that is
14accessible to or held by 3rd-party service providers of the licensee.
SB160,8,1615 (b) Assess the likelihood and potential damage of the threats identified under
16par. (a), taking into consideration the sensitivity of the nonpublic information.
SB160,8,1917 (c) Assess the sufficiency of policies, procedures, information systems, and
18other safeguards to manage the threats identified under par. (a) in each relevant
19area of the licensee's operations, including all of the following:
SB160,8,2020 1. Employee training and management.
SB160,8,2221 2. Information systems, including the classification, governance, processing,
22storage, transmission, and disposal of information.
SB160,8,2423 3. Processes for detecting, preventing, and responding to attacks, intrusions,
24and other system failures.
SB160,9,2
1(3) Risk management. Based on the risk assessment under sub. (2), the licensee
2shall do all of the following:
SB160,9,63 (a) Design an information security program to mitigate the identified threats,
4commensurate with the size and complexity of the licensee, the nature and scope of
5the licensee's activities, including its use of 3rd-party service providers, and the
6sensitivity of the nonpublic information.
SB160,9,77 (b) Implement the following security measures, as appropriate:
SB160,9,88 1. Place access controls on information systems.
SB160,9,129 2. Identify and manage the data, personnel, devices, systems, and facilities
10that enable the licensee to achieve its business purposes, taking into consideration
11the relative importance of the data, personnel, devices, systems, and facilities to the
12business objectives and risk strategy of the licensee.
SB160,9,1413 3. Restrict physical access to nonpublic information to authorized individuals
14only.
SB160,9,1715 4. Protect, by encryption or other means, nonpublic information being
16transmitted over an external network and nonpublic information stored on a
17portable computer or storage device or media.
SB160,9,1918 5. Adopt secure development practices for applications that are developed
19in-house and utilized by the licensee.
SB160,9,2120 6. Modify information systems in accordance with the licensee's information
21security program.
SB160,9,2322 7. Utilize effective controls, which may include multifactor authentication
23procedures for employees accessing nonpublic information.
SB160,9,2524 8. Implement regular testing and monitoring of systems and procedures to
25detect actual and attempted attacks on, or intrusions into, an information system.
SB160,10,4
19. Include audit trails within the information security program that are
2designed to detect and respond to cybersecurity events and to reconstruct material
3financial transactions sufficient to support the normal operations and obligations of
4the licensee.
SB160,10,75 10. Implement measures to protect against the destruction, loss, or damage of
6nonpublic information due to environmental hazards, natural and other disasters,
7and technological failures.
SB160,10,98 11. Develop, implement, and maintain practices for the secure disposal of
9nonpublic information in all formats.
SB160,10,1110 (c) Designate at least one employee, affiliate, or outside vendor as responsible
11for the information security program.
SB160,10,1312 (d) Stay informed regarding emerging threats and vulnerabilities and
13implement safeguards to manage the threats and vulnerabilities.
SB160,10,1514 (e) No less than annually, assess the effectiveness of security safeguards,
15including key controls, systems, and procedures.
SB160,10,1716 (f) Include cybersecurity risks in the licensee's enterprise risk management
17process.
SB160,10,1918 (g) Utilize reasonable security measures when sharing information, taking
19into consideration the character of the sharing and the type of information shared.
SB160,10,2120 (h) Provide personnel with cybersecurity awareness training that is updated
21as necessary.
SB160,11,6 22(4) Program adjustments. The licensee shall monitor, evaluate, and adjust the
23information security program under sub. (1) consistent with changes in technology,
24the sensitivity of the nonpublic information, internal and external threats to
25nonpublic information, and changes to the licensee's business operations,

1outsourcing arrangements, and information systems. If a licensee identifies areas,
2systems, or processes that require material improvement, updating, or redesign, the
3insurer shall document the identification and remedial efforts to address the areas,
4systems, or processes. The licensee shall maintain the documentation for a period
5of at least 5 years starting from the date the documentation was created and shall
6produce the documentation upon demand of the commissioner.
SB160,11,12 7(5) Incident response plan. As part of its information security program, a
8licensee shall develop an incident response plan to promptly respond to, and recover
9from, a cybersecurity event that compromises the confidentiality, integrity, or
10availability of nonpublic information, the licensee's information systems, or the
11continuing functionality of any aspect of the licensee's business or operations. The
12incident response plan shall be in writing and address all of the following:
SB160,11,1313 (a) The goals of the incident response plan.
SB160,11,1414 (b) The internal process for responding to a cybersecurity event.
SB160,11,1615 (c) The identification of clear roles, responsibilities, and levels of
16decision-making authority during and immediately following a cybersecurity event.
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