25% off all training courses Offer ends May 29, 2026
View HIPAA Courses
25% off all training courses
View HIPAA Courses
Offer ends May 29, 2026

The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

Federal Judge Tentatively Advances Meta Pixel Medical Privacy Class Action

A class action lawsuit against Meta over the disclosure of health data to the social media giant has been allowed to proceed by a federal judge. The judge issued a tentative order allowing the lawsuit to advance for several of the claims made by the plaintiffs; however, the number of claims has been reduced by around half. The consolidated lawsuit, John Doe v Meta Platforms Inc., filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, alleges the plaintiffs and class members had their medical privacy violated by Facebook’s Meta Pixel tracking tool. The lawsuit alleges that Meta knew, or should have known, that the Pixel tool was being used improperly on the websites of hospitals. The lawsuit alleges at least 664 hospital systems and medical providers were sending medical information to Facebook through the Meta Pixel tool. According to the lawsuit, the improper use of the tracking tool resulted in “the wrongful, contemporaneous, re-direction to Facebook of patient communications to register as a patient, sign-in or out of a supposedly “secure” patient portal,...

Read More

Cisco Umbrella Competitors

In this post we explore some of the main Cisco Umbrella competitors that should be considered when looking for a Cisco Umbrella alternative – each providing a similar level of protection against web-based threats and having equivalent content control capabilities, but available for less than the price of Cisco Umbrella. We have highlighted four Cisco Umbrella competitors that have developed highly accomplished web filtering products which, in many respects, can be considered a direct swap for Cisco Umbrella. The Importance of DNS Filtering Before listing some of the main Cisco Umbrella competitors, it is worthwhile explaining why DNS filtering is so important and why it is now an essential part of the security stack. Hackers and other cybercriminals are devising increasingly sophisticated ways of attacking SMBs and enterprises and the range of threats is far more diverse than in years gone by. Whereas for many SMBs, a firewall, spam filter, and antivirus software were once enough to keep networks secure, the threat landscape today requires additional protection from web-based...

Read More

Advocate Aurora Health Settles Pixel Lawsuit for $12.225 Million

Advocate Aurora Health has proposed a $12.225 million settlement to resolve a consolidated class action lawsuit filed over the impermissible disclosure of patient data to third parties via tracking technologies. Advocate Aurora Health was one of the first HIPAA-regulated entities to report a Pixel-related data breach to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and notify patients that their protected health information had been impermissibly disclosed to unauthorized third parties via these tracking technologies. Advocate Aurora Health operates 17 hospitals and more than 500 facilities in Wisconsin and Illinois. Advocate Aurora Health used tracking technologies such as Meta Pixel, Google Analytics, and other third-party tools on its website, patient portal, and scheduling app. The tracking tools were used to gain insights into the use of its website and app to better understand patient needs to improve the services it provides. Advocate Aurora Health has since removed the tracking tools from its website, MyChart patient portal, and LiveWell App. The HIPAA Breach Notification Rule...

Read More

Hackers Backdoor 1,900 Citrix NetScaler Devices

Hackers have been conducting a mass exploitation campaign targeting Citrix NetScalers to exploit a critical vulnerability tracked as CVE-2023-3519. The automated exploitation campaign compromises NetScalers and installs web shells to provide a persistent backdoor into systems. The web shell allows the threat actor to execute arbitrary commands on compromised systems, even when the patch is applied to fix the vulnerability. The vulnerability affects Citrix Application Delivery Controller and Gateway appliances configured as gateway servers and was disclosed by Citrix on July 18, 2023. A patch was released to fix the vulnerability and Citrix warned at the time that there had been limited exploitation of the vulnerability in the wild, although no details were released about the extent of the exploitation. Since then, several security firms have reported cases of exploitation of the flaw. Researchers at the cybersecurity company Fox-IT, part of NCC Group, in collaboration with the Dutch Institute of Vulnerability Disclosure (DIVD), have been trying to identify the compromised systems...

Read More

Cummins Behavioral Health Reports 157K Record Data Breach

Cummins Behavioral Health Systems Inc. in Avon, IN, has recently reported a data security incident to the Maine Attorney General that has affected 157,688 patients. On March 9, 2023, a ransom note was detected within its computer environment that had been placed there by an unauthorized individual. No file encryption occurred; however, the attacker claimed to have infiltrated sensitive data. The forensic investigation confirmed that an unauthorized individual had access to its network between February 2, 2023, and March 9, 2023. The information removed from its systems included names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver’s license/State ID numbers, financial account information, payment card information, usernames/passwords, health insurance information, and medical information. System security has been strengthened to prevent similar incidents in the future, and affected individuals have been offered complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services. Email Encryption Failure Exposed Client Data at Redwood Coast Regional Center Redwood...

Read More
x

Is Your Organization HIPAA Compliant?

Find Out With Our Free HIPAA Compliance Checklist

Get Free Checklist