IT Security Company COO Pleads Guilty to Conducting Cyberattack to Win Business
The Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the Atlanta cybersecurity firm Securolytics has pled guilty to one count of intentional damage to a protected computer after masterminding a series of attacks on Gwinnett Medical Center in Georgia in an attempt to win new business. Vikas Singla was indicted by a federal grand jury on June 8, 2021, for a series of attacks on Gwinnett Medical Center in Duluth and Lawrenceville, GA. The September 2018 attacks disrupted the medical center’s phone and network printer services, data was stolen from a Hologic R2 digitizing device, and the attacks resulted in damage being caused to 10 protected computers. According to the indictment, Singla was aided and abetted by other (unnamed) individuals in attacks that were conducted for financial gain and commercial advantage. Singla was charged with 17 counts of causing damage to a protected computer and one count of information theft and faced a maximum jail term of 10 years for each of the damaging a protected computer counts and a maximum of 5 years in jail for the theft of data count. Singla initially...
Is Square HIPAA Compliant?
Square is HIPAA compliant for some services offered by the company and will enter into a Business Associate Agreement for these services; but, if a covered entity uses Square solely as a payment processor, it is not necessary for Square to be HIPAA compliant or enter into a Business Associate Agreement. Square is a multi-tool business solution that started life as point-of-sale payment processing system. In recent years, it has extended its services to include an ecommerce platform, team management software, payroll services, and much more. In December 2021, the company changed its name to Block, but still provides services under the Square brand. For HIPAA covered entities wishing to use Square´s services, the issue of is Square HIPAA compliant is a little complicated because, when a covered entity only uses Square for its payment processing services, compliance with HIPAA is not required. This is because financial institutions are exempted from HIPAA compliance when processing payments for health plan premiums or health care. This exemption appears in the original 1996 text of...
CISA Publishes Mitigation Guide for the Healthcare and Public Health Sector
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has published a new mitigation guide for Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) Sector for combating pervasive cyber threats affecting the sector. The guidance is a supplemental companion to the HPH Cyber Risk Summary, published by CISA on July 19, 2023, and maps CISA’s Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals (CPGs) to the 405(d) Health Industry Cybersecurity Practices (HCIP): Managing Threats and Protecting Patients guidance that was jointly published by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Health Sector Coordinating Council (HSCC). CISA has identified vulnerabilities and insecure configurations across the HPH sector that present opportunities for mitigating risks before they can be exploited by threat actors. The top vulnerabilities in the HPH sector are web application vulnerabilities, encryption weaknesses, unsupported software and Windows operating systems, known exploited vulnerabilities, and vulnerable services. These vulnerabilities are commonly exploited in phishing, ransomware, and...
October 2023 Healthcare Data Breach Report
For the second consecutive month, the number of reported data breaches of 500 or more healthcare records has fallen, with October seeing the joint-lowest number of reported data breaches this year. After the 29.4% fall in reported data breaches from August to September, there was a further 16.7% reduction, with 40 data breaches reported by HIPAA-regulated entities in October – the opposite trend to what was observed in 2022, when data breaches increased from 49 in August 2022 to 71 breaches in October 2022. October’s total of 40 breaches is well below the 12-month average of 54 breaches per month (median:52 breaches). For the third consecutive month, the number of breached healthcare records has fallen, from more than 18 million records in July 2023 to 3,569,881 records in October – a month-over-month percentage decrease of 52.76%. October’s total is well below the 12-month average of 7,644,509 breached records a month (median: 5,951,455 records). While this is certainly good news, it should noted that 2023 has been a particularly bad year for healthcare data breaches. Between...
FDA Releases Guidance on Managing Legacy Medical Device Cybersecurity Risks
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has published a report it commissioned that makes recommendations on how to manage the cybersecurity risks of legacy medical devices. Legacy medical devices are classed as devices that can no longer be reasonably protected against current cybersecurity threats, even though they may still adequately perform their primary function and have a useful life beyond the declared end-of-support or end-of-life date. When medical devices reach end-of-life, patches stop being released to fix vulnerabilities, and unpatched vulnerabilities can be exploited to gain access to the devices and networks to which they are connected. In many cases, the vendors of the devices cannot continue to issue software patches due to outdated technology and compatibility issues and healthcare delivery organizations (HDOs) may not be able to replace them due to the high cost of doing so. If the devices were to be removed from use, it could have serious implications for patient safety and clinical operations. Medical devices are regulated by the FDA, which was tasked by...



