Intellihartx Victim of Fortra GoAnywhere Hack: 490,000 Individuals Affected
The Tennessee-based payment and collections service provider, Intellihartx, has recently confirmed that the personal and health information of 489,830 individuals was stolen in a recent hacking and extortion attack. In late January and early February 2023, the Clop ransomware group exploited a zero-day vulnerability in Fortra’s GoAnywhere MFT to gain access to the data of approximately 130 companies. While Clop often uses ransomware to encrypt files, these attacks only involved data theft and extortion, with demands for payment issued to prevent the public release of the stolen data. Intellihartx learned that it had been affected on February 2, 2023, and launched an investigation to determine the scope of the breach. Preliminary results were obtained on March 24 that indicated sensitive data had potentially been stolen, and data owners started to be notified on April 11, 2023. The comprehensive review of the affected files confirmed on May 10, 2023, that protected health information had been compromised. The review was completed on May 19, 2023. Intellihartx’s analysis of the...
Blackbaud Had No Common Law Duty to Ensure the Confidentiality of Trinity Health’s Data
A district court judge in Indiana has ruled in favor of the plaintiff in a lawsuit alleging negligence for failing to prevent a breach of protected health information, ruling that there is no common law duty in Indiana to ensure the confidentiality of data provided to a vendor. The lawsuit was filed by Trinity Health and its insurer, Aspen American Insurance Company (AAIC), against Blackbaud, a provider of software and support services. In order to perform the contracted duties, Blackbaud was provided with the protected health information of patients and donors. In 2020, Blackbaud was the victim of a ransomware attack that affected more than 13,000 customers. Trinity Health was one of the worst affected customers and had more than 3.2 million records stolen in the attack. There has been a long-running legal battle to recover losses incurred due to the data breach. The same district court previously dismissed Trinity Health/AAIC’s complaint against Blackbaud due to a lack of alleged causation for each of their claims. Trinity Health and AAIC filed an amended complaint which...
HC3 Raises Awareness of Diverse Threat Actors Targeting the HPH Sector
The HHS’ Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center has issued a threat brief to highlight the types of cyber threat actors that target the health and public health sector (HPH), and their differing objectives, tactics, techniques, and procedures. The HPH sector is a relatively easy target for cybercriminals compared to other industry sectors. There is a complex supply chain involving many different vendors, a large attack surface with many IoT and IoMT-connected devices that are difficult to secure, reliance on outdated software and operating systems that have reached end-of-life, and HPH sector organizations often find it difficult to recruit and retain skilled cybersecurity staff. HPH sector organizations also store large quantities of data that can be easily monetized and used for a range of nefarious purposes such as identity theft, blackmail, and insurance fraud. Since the sector is highly regulated, there are often costly legal ramifications for healthcare organizations that suffer data breaches, and successful attacks can cause significant reputational damage which...
Supreme Court Ruling Narrows Reach of Identity Theft Law
The Supreme Court has ruled against the government, which means federal prosecutors will have to curb identity theft charges and restrict them to cases where the misuse of another person’s identification is the crux of the criminal offense, rather than the current broad interpretation that allows identity theft charges for fraudulent billing, where the use of another person’s identification is merely an ancillary feature of a billing method. Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory jail term of 2 years in addition to any sentence for the predicate felony. Prior to the Supreme Court ruling, there was no distinction between an identity thief stealing an individual’s identity and running up huge debts, a lawyer rounding up bills and only charging full hours, a waitress overcharging customers, and a doctor overbilling Medicaid. The Supreme Court decision related to the latter. William and David Dubin are father and son psychologists who ran a mental health testing company called Psychological ARTs. In 2013, David Dubin was examining a patient when he was informed by his father...
Update on MOVEit Vulnerability Exploitation and Extortion: Victims Given Until June 14 to Pay Ransoms
A zero-day vulnerability in the MOVEit file transfer service (CVE-2023-34362) started to be exploited by a cyber threat actor at scale over the Memorial Day weekend. Progress Software issued an advisory about the vulnerability on May 31, 2023, and rapidly released patches to fix the flaw, but not in time to prevent mass exploitation of the vulnerability. Remote exploitation of the flaw allowed access to be gained to the MOVEit server database, providing access to customer data. A few days later, several major companies confirmed they had been impacted by the attacks, including the airlines British Airways and Aer Lingus, the UK drugstore chain Boots, the University of Rochester in New York, and the Nova Scotia provincial government, which had all fallen victim and had data exfiltrated through their payroll and HR service provider, Zellis. Nova Scotia Health has confirmed that the personal information of up to 100,000 employees was stolen in the attack. The Clop ransomware gang and associated FIN11 threat group were suspected of involvement in the mass exploitation of the...



