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BOARD MEMBER ADVISORY
Board members are increasingly held personally liable for cybersecurity failures they did not understand, did not question, and did not prevent. FracSec provides the independent cyber judgment that closes that gap — before a breach, a regulator, or a plaintiff's attorney does it for you.
THE BOARD MEMBER'S EXPOSURE
SEC rules and state corporate law increasingly treat cybersecurity oversight as a fiduciary duty. Directors who cannot demonstrate informed oversight face personal exposure.
The SEC's cybersecurity disclosure rules require boards to describe their oversight processes. Vague or inaccurate disclosures create liability independent of any breach.
Board members sign documents — proxy statements, annual reports, audit committee certifications — that carry legal weight. Understanding what you are certifying matters.
Most boards inherit cybersecurity programs they did not design, built on assumptions they were never asked to validate. FracSec provides the independent read that management cannot.
WHAT FRACSEC PROVIDES
Pre-board meeting cyber briefings — what to ask, what to push back on, and what to approve
Independent review of management's cybersecurity presentations and risk reports
Audit committee support — understanding what your CISO is telling you and what they are not
Incident response preparation — how decisions get made before lawyers, regulators, and press arrive
Governance gap analysis — what your board's oversight process is missing relative to SEC expectations
Personal liability assessment — where your individual exposure sits within the organization's risk posture
"Security decisions are human decisions. Boards make them whether they know it or not."
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