NuLife Med Settles Class Action Data Breach Lawsuit
The Manchester, New Hampshire-based medical equipment company, NuLife Med, has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit that was filed in response to a March 2022 data breach that affected more than 80,000 individuals. NuLife Med identified suspicious activity within its computer network on March 11, 2022. The forensic investigation revealed hackers had access to its systems between March 9 and March 11, 2022, during which time data was viewed or exfiltrated. The compromised data included names, addresses, medical information, health insurance information, and in some cases, Social Security numbers, driver’s licenses, and financial account/credit card information. A lawsuit was filed in the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida – Pires, et al. v. NuLife Med LLC – that alleged NuLife Med was negligent for failing to implement appropriate safeguards to keep patient data private and confidential, which allowed a data breach to occur that was entirely preventable. The lawsuit claimed that the plaintiff, Victor Pires, and similarly situated individuals, suffered an...
Security Teams Pressured into Keeping Quiet About Security Breaches
Ransomware and phishing attacks on organizations have increased over the past 12 months as have the costs associated with the attacks. In 2022, the average cost of a data breach increased to $4.35 million and $10.1 million for healthcare data breaches (IBM Security). Due to the high costs and reputational damage caused by data breaches, cybersecurity teams are being pressured into keeping cyberattacks and data breaches quiet, even though there are often legal requirements for reporting data breaches. The recently published Bitdefender 2023 Cybersecurity Assessment has revealed the extent to which cybersecurity teams are being pressured into staying silent about data breaches. In the United States, 74.7% of respondents said they had experienced a data breach or data leak in the past 12 months and 70.7% of those respondents said they had been told to keep a security breach confidential when it should have been reported. 54.7% of respondents said they did keep a security breach confidential when they knew it should be reported. Bitdefender’s survey suggests healthcare organizations...
CommonSpirit Health Issues Update Confirming 164 Facilities Affected by Ransomware Attack
CommonSpirit Health has issued an update about its October 2022 ransomware attack and has confirmed that patients from 164 facilities were affected by the attack and had their sensitive data exposed or stolen. CommonSpirit Health detected the ransomware attack on October 2, 2022, and the forensic investigation revealed unauthorized individuals had access to its systems between September 16, 2022, and October 3, 2022. In December 2022, CommonSpirit Health confirmed that the threat actor responsible for the attack had stolen patient data prior to encrypting files, and said patients of Franciscan Medical Group/Franciscan Health and Virginia Mason Franciscan Health facilities had been affected. Those individuals were notified about the data breach in December. In February 2023, CommonSpirit Health issued a further update confirming the attackers also obtained the data of patients of St. Luke’s Diagnostic Cath Lab, Diagnostic Heart Center in Houston, TX, and sent notifications to those individuals in February. The latest update on the ransomware attack was issued on April 6, 2023, and...
94% of Organizations Experienced a Cyberattack in 2022
Almost all organizations experienced at least one cyberattack in the past 12 months, according to new research published by Sophos in its State of Cybersecurity 2023 Report. The findings come from an independent study of 3,000 leaders with responsibility for cybersecurity across 14 countries, including the United States. 94% of respondents said they had to deal with at least one cyberattack on their organization in the past 12 months. Malicious actors are increasingly using automation and cybercrime-as-a-service offerings to conduct sophisticated cyberattacks at scale, and network defenders are finding it increasingly difficult to defend against these threats. The problem has been compounded by a shortage of expertise due to the global lack of cybersecurity professionals. The extent to which IT teams are having to investigate and respond to potential intrusions is limiting their ability to complete other IT projects and dedicate time to strategic projects, and IT teams are overworked and overwhelmed. The survey confirmed that IT teams feel they are constantly on the back foot and...
Hackers Increasingly Targeting Cloud Apps to Distribute Malware
Hackers are increasingly using cloud apps for malware delivery, according to the latest Netskope Threat Labs Report. Historically, malicious actors have relived on email and malicious URLs for malware delivery and security solutions have been developed to protect against these attack vectors. Secure email gateways can detect and block malicious email attachments and URL filtering blocks access to malicious websites and as defenses against these vectors have improved, threat actors have had to look for alternative ways to deliver their malicious payloads and many are now taking advantage of the increasing popularity of enterprise cloud apps. As is the case with other industries, cloud apps have proven popular in healthcare for improving productivity and supporting a remote workforce. The average enterprise healthcare user interacts with 22 cloud apps a month, with 94% of enterprise healthcare users downloading data from cloud apps each month. The most popular cloud apps in healthcare are OneDrive, Microsoft Teams, SharePoint, and Google Drive, with OneDrive used by 36% of enterprise...



