Common use of Response controls Clause in Contracts

Response controls. Controls are in place to protect against, and support the detection of, malicious use of assets and malicious software and to report potential incidents to the data importer’s IS function or Service Desk for appropriate action. Controls may include, but are not limited to: information security policies and standards; restricted access; designated development and test environments; virus detection on servers, desktop and notebooks; virus email attachment scanning; system compliance scans; intrusion prevention monitoring and response; firewall rules; logging and alerting on key events; information handling procedures based on data type; e-commerce application and network security; and system and application vulnerability scanning. Additional controls may be implemented based on risk. 1. implement industry-standard encryption practices in its transmission of personal data. Industry-standard encryption methods used by data importer includes Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), Transport Layer Security (TLS), a secure shell program such as SSH, and/or Internet Protocol Security (IPSec); 2. if technically feasible, encrypt all personal data, including, in particular any sensitive personal data or confidential information, when transmitting or transferring that data over any public network, or over any network not owned and maintained by data importer. The data importer’s policy recognizes that encryption is ineffective unless the encryption key is inaccessible to unauthorized individuals and instructs personnel never to provide an encryption key via the same channel as the encrypted document;

Appears in 4 contracts

Samples: Data Protection Agreement, Data Protection Agreement, Data Protection Agreement

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