258,000 Wisconsin Residents Notified of Adams County Government Data Breach
More than 258,000 people have had their personal health information, personal identification information and/or tax information exposed as a result of a data security incident in Adams County, Wisconsin. A potential security breach was detected on March 28, 2018 after questionable activity was identified on the Adams County computer system and network. An investigation was launched to determine whether any sensitive data had been accessed and on June 29, a data breach was confirmed to have occurred. Some evidence has been found that suggests PHI and PII has been accessed and potentially obtained by an unauthorized individual. 258,102 individuals have potentially been affected. The exposed data was collected between January 1, 2013 and March 28, 2018 and were stored on the systems used by the departments of Health and Human Services, Child Support, Veteran Service Office, Extension Office, Adams County Employees, Solid Waste, and the Sheriff’s Office. A criminal investigation has been launched into the breach and the suspect(s) have been prevented from accessing the entire...
417,000 Individuals Affected by Augusta University Health Phishing Attack
A serious data breach has been reported by Augusta University Health that has impacted an estimated 417,000 individuals including patients, faculty members and a limited number of students. Most of the patients affected by the breach had previously received medical services at Augusta University Medical Center or Children’s Hospital of Georgia, although patients from over 80 outpatient clinics in Georgia have also been affected and had their personally identifiable information (PII) and protected health information (PHI) exposed. A wide range of PII and PHI was exposed, including names, addresses, dates of birth, lab test results, diagnoses, medications, treatment information, dates of service, medical record numbers, surgical information, and health insurance details. Augusta University Health said only a small percentage of individuals had a driver’s license number or Social Security number exposed. The PII and PHI were saved in emails and email attachments. Augusta University Health said a data security incident was discovered on September 11, 2017 following a phishing attack on...
Significant Vulnerabilities Identified in Maryland’s Medicaid Management Information System
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) has published the findings of an audit of Maryland’s Medicaid system. The audit was conducted as part of the HHS OIG’s efforts to oversee states’ use of various Federal programs and to determine whether appropriate security controls had been implemented to protect its Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS) and Medicaid data. The audit consisted of interviews with staff members, a review of supporting documentation, and use of vulnerability scanning software on network devices, servers, websites, and databases that supported its MMIS. The audit uncovered multiple system security weaknesses that could potentially be exploited by threat actors to gain access to Medicaid data and disrupt critical Medicaid operations. Collectively, and in some cases individually, the vulnerabilities were ‘significant’ and could have compromised the integrity of the state’s Medicaid program. Details of the vulnerabilities uncovered by auditors were not disclosed publicly, although OIG did explain that the...
ICS-CERT Warns of Vulnerabilities in Philips IntelliSpace Cardiovascular Products
ICS-CERT has issued an advisory about two vulnerabilities that have been identified in Philips IntelliSpace Cardiovascular products, one of which has been given a high severity rating and could allow a threat actor to elevate privileges and gain full control of a vulnerable device. The improper privilege management vulnerability (CVE-2018-14787) is present in IntelliSpace Cardiovascular cardiac image and information management software version 2.x and earlier releases and Xcelera V4.1 and earlier versions. The vulnerability could not be exploited remotely. Local access is required, and an authenticated user would need to have write privileges. If exploited, privileges could be escalated and access gained to folders containing executables. Arbitrary code could be executed to give the attacker full control of the system. The vulnerability has been assigned a CVSS v3 severity score of 7.3. An unquoted search path or element vulnerability (CVE-2018-14789) is present in IntelliSpace Cardiovascular Version 3.1 and earlier versions and Xcelera Version 4.1 and earlier versions. This flaw...
Microsoft ADFS Vulnerability Allows Bypassing of Multi-Factor Authentication
A vulnerability has been discovered in Microsoft’s Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) that allows multi-factor authentication (MFA) to be bypassed with ease. The flaw is being tracked as CVE-2018-8340 and was discovered by Andrew Lee, a security researcher at Okta. ADFS is used by many organizations to help secure accounts and ADFA is used by vendors such as SecureAuth, Okta, and RSA to add multi-factor authentication to their security offerings. To exploit the vulnerability an attacker would need to obtain the login credentials of an employee and have a valid second factor authentication token. That token could then be used as authentication to access any other person’s account if their username and password is known. A threat actor could easily obtain a username and a password by conducting a phishing campaign. The number of phishing attacks on healthcare organizations that have been reported recently show just how easy it is to fool employees into disclosing their login credentials. A brute force attempt on an account with a weak password would also work. Obtaining the...



