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Futures Week

Will Law Firm Data Be Any Safer in 2026?

By Sharon Nelson

As always, the College of Law Practice Management’s 2016 Futures Conference featured wonderful speakers — and the theme this year, “What will Law Look Like in 2026?”, brought out some provocative ideas. Today, Sharon Nelson tackles information security. Are we getting safer?

Will our data be any safer in 2026? That was the question posed to me at the College of Law Practice Management’s 2016 Futures Conference. As part of a great legal technology panel, my answer was quick and decisive: No, it will not be.

Look how the “cone of silence” (check Maxwell Smart if you don’t recognize the reference) around law firm breaches has been shattered in 2016 alone. It turns out that law firms, even major law firms, have been breached again and again. Do we really believe that there will be any respite from the attacks?

Law Firm as Honey Pot

Law firms, by their very nature, are honey pots. If you target a corporation, you might get that corporation’s data, but probably not a lot of data from other companies. On the other hand, law firms hold the data of many individuals and corporations. That’s what makes law firms such an attractive targets. And law firm security is, in general, not as good as that of major business entities — although it is getting better.

Think about it — hackers are motivated largely by money (think insider knowledge that can be used to leverage stock market profits or ransomware, which has become increasingly profitable) and by espionage motives. These days, all nations seem to be spying on each other, also for economic motives to protect their own countries, but additionally for political and military intelligence. I only foresee escalation in the motivation to hack.

As we have already witnessed, attacks are increasing in number and sophistication — and the good guys are always limping badly behind the bad guys. Even the good-guy countries (and I hope the United States is one) really believe they have the absolute right to know what we are doing. The Fourth Amendment is looking more and more like a hunk of Swiss cheese.

Worse yet, our younger generation doesn’t seem to care, which makes it even easier for governments to snoop without protest.

Though encryption is a lawyer’s best friend, there have been recent rumblings that AES-256 (the most common strong encryption standard) might have predictable factors that will make it easier to crack. Add that to the easy ability of governments to ramp up supercomputers and we are pretty much screwed if those rumblings are accurate.

One question from the Futures Conference audience involved cloud computing. Roughly 50 percent of lawyers embrace the cloud and roughly 50 percent are in the “never, ever” camp. The truth is that clouds often protect confidential data far better than law firms do. And without going totally “into the weeds,” there are ways that sophisticated cloud providers (whose cybersecurity talent most law firms could NEVER afford to buy) can protect data by dispersing it into segments across multiple clouds, which has to be reassembled before it can be read. Way too simple an explanation but perhaps easier to understand.

And just wait until the day when affordable quantum computing arrives. It is in its infancy now, but think of an abacus compared to one of today’s supercomputers and then imagine something that is a billion times more powerful than our supercomputers. That’s as technical as I will get, because even my eyes glaze over when I read about quantum computing. But rest assured, quantum computing will change everything we think we know about cybersecurity.

Scary? Oh yeah. Welcome to the future of trying to protect law firm data!

Illustration ©iStockPhoto.com

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Sharon Nelson Sharon Nelson

Sharon Nelson is nationally known as an expert in digital forensics, information security and information technology. Sharon is president of Sensei Enterprises, Inc., a digital forensics, legal technology and information security firm based in Fairfax, Virg., past president of the Virginia Bar Association and a Trustee of the College of Law Practice Management. She has co-authored numerous books, including “The Solo and Small Firm Legal Technology Guides” and “Encryption Made Simple for Lawyers.” Sharon blogs at Ride the Lightning and co-hosts the Digital Detectives and Digital Edge podcasts. Follow her on Twitter @SharonNelsonEsq.

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