Insurers Create Tighter Rules To Curtail War Loopholes

March 7, 2022

Ongoing cyberattacks in the war between Russia and Ukraine will force insurers to tighten rules and raise premiums. This is necessary as polices on “war exclusion” or “hostile act exclusion” becomes old and weak.

The need to enforce stricter rules came after a court ruled in favor of Merck, a pharmaceutical company. The ruling found an insurer liable for losses stemming from the 2017 NotPetya malware attack.

Cyber policies for U.S. P / C insurers typically include “war exclusion” or “hostile act exclusion.”

While Merck claimed to have suffered significant losses of $1.4 billion, the ruling said Merck was entitled to a summary judgment because the war exclusion language was not applicable.

The court ruled that Merck was entitled to assume that the exclusion only applied to traditional forms of warfare because the insurer had failed to change the language of the contract.

The stricter contractual rules and higher premiums are caused by cybersecurity risks arising from COVID-19, the Ukrainian war, and others. However, insurers are also using these rules to change “reasonableness” standards of what an effective cybersecurity risk management program should include.

For more information read the original story in CIO DIVE.

 

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 30, 2025 A fast-moving cyberattack has compromised more than 59,000 internet-facing Next.js servers in less than two days after more...

December 29, 2025 The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has warned that several of its Internet Time more...

December 29, 2025 A critical security flaw has been found in LangChain, one of the most widely used frameworks for more...

December 23, 2025 South Korea will require facial recognition scans to open new mobile phone accounts. The new rule is more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn