3 Year Jail Term for UK Man Linked to The Dark Overlord Hacking Group
A man linked to the hacking group TheDarkOverlord has been sentenced to serve three years in jail for fraud and blackmail offenses, although not for any cyberattacks or extortion attempts related to the The Dark Overlord gang. Nathan Wyatt, 36, from Wellingborough, England, known online as the Crafty Cockney, pleaded guilty to 20 counts of fraud by false representation, a further two counts of blackmail, and one count of possession of a false identity document with intent to deceive. Last week, at Southwark Crown Court, Wyatt was sentenced to serve three years in jail by Judge Martin Griffiths. At the sentencing hearing, Judge Griffiths suggested Wyatt was responsible for many more crimes other than those pursued via the courts. Some of those offenses are related to the TheDarkOverlord. In September last year, Wyatt was arrested for attempting to broker the sale of photographs of Pippa Middleton, which had been obtained from a hack of her iPhone. Pippa Middleton is the sister of the Duchess of Cambridge. The charges in relation to that incident were dropped and Wyatt maintains he...
Second Unencrypted Laptop Stolen from Rocky Mountain Health Care Services
Rocky Mountain Health Care Services of Colorado Springs has discovered an unencrypted laptop has been stolen from one of its employees. This is the second such incident to be discovered in the space of three months. The latest incident was discovered on September 28. The laptop computer was discovered to contain the protected health information of a limited number of patients. The types of information stored on the device included first and last names, addresses, dates of birth, health insurance information, Medicare numbers, and limited treatment information. The incident has been reported to law enforcement and patients impacted by the incident have been notified by mail. Rocky Mountain Health Care Services, which also operates as Rocky Mountain PACE, BrainCare, HealthRide, and Rocky Mountain Options for Long Term Care, also discovered on June 18, 2017 that a mobile phone and laptop computer were stolen from a former employee. The devices contained names, dates of birth, addresses, limited treatment information, and health insurance details. To date, only one of those incidents...
9,500 Patients Impacted by Medical College of Wisconsin Phishing Attack
A Medical College of Wisconsin phishing attack has resulted in the exposure of approximately 9,500 patients’ protected health information. The attackers managed to gain access to several employees’ email accounts, which contained a range of sensitive information of patients and some faculty staff. The types of information in the compromised email accounts included names, addresses, medical record numbers, dates of birth, health insurance details, medical diagnoses, treatment information, surgical information, and dates of service. A very limited number of individuals also had their Social Security numbers and bank account information exposed. The incident occurred over the space of a week in the summer between July 21 and July 28 when spear phishing emails were sent to specific individuals at the Medical College of Wisconsin. Responding to those emails resulted in the attackers gaining access to email login credentials. Medical College of Wisconsin brought in a computer forensics firm to conduct an investigation into the phishing attack, and while that investigation established...
November Healthcare Breach Barometer Report Highlights Seriousness of Insider Data Breaches
Protenus has released its November 2017 healthcare Breach Barometer Report. After a particularly bad September, healthcare data breach incidents fell to more typical levels, with 37 breaches tracked in October. The monthly summary of healthcare data breaches includes incidents reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR), and incidents announced via the media and tracked by databreaches.net. Those incidents include several breaches that have yet to be reported to OCR, including a major breach that has impacted at least 150,000 individuals – The actual number of individuals impacted will not be known until the investigation has been completed. The numbers of individuals impacted by 8 breaches have not yet been disclosed. Including the 150,000 individuals impacted by largest breach of the month, there were 246,246 victims of healthcare data breaches in October 2017 – the lowest monthly total since May 2017. The healthcare industry has historically recorded a higher than average number of data breaches due to insiders, although over the...
PCI and HIPAA Compliance Comparison
For organizations in healthcare-related industries, who both have access to PHI and accept credit card payments, a PCI and HIPAA compliance comparison can help find overlaps and similarities in their compliance obligations. These overlaps and similarities can assist organizations with their risk assessments in order to avoid duplication and better mitigate the risk of a data breach. In this comparison between PCI compliance and HIPAA compliance, we have used the PCI Data Security Standard v3.2 as our reference. Readers are advised to review the PCI Security Standards website periodically for updates to the Data Security Standard that may affect the accuracy of this PCI and HIPAA compliance comparison. UPDATE JULY 2024: PCI DSS v3.2 was retired in December 2018. The current version is PCI DSS v4.0.1 (publish June 2024). Visitors should download the current version from the PCI Security Standards website to ensure PCI and HIPAA compliance comparisons are up to date. PCI and HIPAA Compliance Comparison – Introduction The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS)...



