Airway Oxygen Inc. Ransomware Attack Impacts up to 500,000 Individuals
A ransomware attack on the Wyoming, MI-based medical supply company Airway Oxygen Inc., in April 2017 has potentially resulted in the protected health information of 500,000 individuals being accessed by the attackers. No evidence of data access or theft was uncovered by Airway Oxygen, although it was not possible to rule out the possibility that information was compromised in the attack. The attackers gained access to the company’s technical infrastructure on April 18, 2017 and installed ransomware. The part of the network affected was discovered to contain protected health information including names, addresses, birth dates, contact telephone numbers, medical diagnoses, health insurance policy numbers and details of the services the company provided to patients. Financial information and Social Security numbers were not exposed. Upon discovery of the cyberattack, immediate action was taken to prevent further network intrusions and a scan of the entire system was performed to search for any additional malware. Passwords for users, vendors and applications were changed as a...
World’s Largest Data Breach Settlement Agreed by Anthem
The largest data breach settlement in history has recently been agreed by the health insurer Anthem Inc. Anthem experienced the largest healthcare data breach ever reported in 2015, with the cyberattack resulting in the theft of 78.8 million records of current and former health plan members. The breach involved names, addresses, Social Security numbers, email addresses, birthdates and employment/income information. A breach on that scale naturally resulted in many class-action lawsuits, with more than 100 lawsuits consolidated by a Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. Now, two years on, Anthem has agreed to settle the litigation for $115 million. If approved, that makes this the largest data breach settlement ever – Substantially higher than $18.5 million settlement agreed by Target after its 41 million-record breach and the $19.5 million paid to consumers by Home Depot after its 50-million record breach in 2014. After experiencing the data breach, Anthem offered two years of complimentary credit monitoring services to affected plan members. The settlement will, in...
Hard Drive Theft Sees Data of 1 Million Individuals Exposed
Washington State University (WSU) in Seattle is notifying approximately 1 million people that some of their personal information has been exposed following the theft of a computer hard drive. The hard drive was used to store backup information from a server used by the University’s Social & Economic Sciences Research Center (SESRC). The hard drive was stored in an 85lb locked safe. That safe, along with the contents, was stolen. There is a possibility that the safe has been opened and the information on the hard drive has been accessed. The thieves would require some skill to view the information as data were stored in a relational database which is not straightforward to access, although it is possible that the thieves could figure out how to view the information. WSU says some of the files on the device were password protected and some had been encrypted. The University discovered the safe was missing on April 21, 2017 and immediately conducted an investigation. WSU brought in a leading computer forensics firm to determine which data were backed up on the device and could...
Google to Remove Personal Medical Information From Its Search Results
There are only a handful of content categories that Google will not display in its search results. Now the list has grown slightly with the addition of personal medical records, specifically, the ‘confidential, personal medical records of private people.’ The update to its policy was made yesterday, with medical records joining national identification numbers such as Social Security numbers, bank account numbers, credit card numbers, images of signatures, sexual abuse images, revenge porn, and material that has been uploaded to the Internet in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Google’s indexing system captures all publicly accessible information that has been uploaded to the Internet, although there has been criticism in recent years about the types of information Google allows to be listed. Even so, it is rare for Google to make changes to its algorithms to block certain types of content. The last addition to the list of material that can be removed automatically by Google was revenge porn – nude or sexually explicit images that have been uploaded to the...
FDA Chief Announces New Plan for Post-Market Regulation of Digital Health Products
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, M.D., has announced the FDA will be launching a new, risk-based regulatory framework in the fall for overseeing connected medical technology, including health apps and medical devices. The FDA wants to encourage and promote innovation that will lead to the development of new and beneficial medical technologies; however, it is essential that these technologies can benefit patients without placing their health or privacy at risk. Gottlieb said the FDA has now developed a new Digital Health Innovation Plan that will foster “innovation at the intersection of medicine and digital health technology.” The plan includes a novel post-market approach that will allow the regulation of digital medical devices and health-related apps. In a recent blog post, Gottlieb pointed out that close to 165,000 health-related apps have now been released for Smartphones and Apple devices, with forecasts estimating the apps will be downloaded 1.7 billion times by the end of this year. These apps have the potential to improve the health of...



