It's a complicated time to be a law firm's chief information officer. Hackers tend to view law firms as the weak link in a chain that leads all the way to a business' vault of trade secrets and sensitive information. Not only that, but the penalties for failing to protect data continues to escalate thanks to the rise of privacy regimes such as the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation or the incoming California Consumer Privacy Act. All of it requires CIOs to keep a closer eye on their firm's IT infrastructure while simultaneously managing the garden-variety problems facing almost every organization in the Information Age: too many emails, too many devices and not nearly enough time.