Email Security Incidents Reported by HealthPlex and Optima Dermatology
Healthplex Inc., one of the largest providers of dental insurance in New York State, has announced that the email account of an employee was compromised in a phishing attack on November 24, 2021. Upon discovery of the breach, the email account was immediately secured to prevent further unauthorized access, and an investigation was launched to determine the nature and scope of the breach. On April 5, 2021, Healthplex confirmed that the email account contained the personal and protected health information of 89,955 individuals who had previously enrolled in its dental plans. The exposed information varied from individual to individual and may have included first and last names in combination with one or more of the following data types: Address, group name and number, member ID number, plan affiliation, date of birth, date of service, provider name, ADA codes and their description, billed/paid amounts, prescription drug names, Social Security number, banking information, credit card number, username and password for the member portal, email address, phone number, and driver’s license...
Connecticut Passes Comprehensive Data Privacy Law
Connecticut has joined California, Colorado, Utah, and Virginia in passing a comprehensive new data privacy law that establishes responsibilities for businesses that collect and process the personal data of state residents and gives consumers new rights. The Connecticut Data Privacy Act (Senate Bill 6) was passed 35-0 by the Senate and 144-5 in the House of Representatives and awaits the signature of the state Governor, Ned Lamont. The new privacy law comes into effect on July 1, 2023. The new law establishes a framework for controlling and processing the personal data of state residents, sets privacy protection standards for data controllers and data processors, and gives state residents rights over the collection and use of their personal data. Consumers will be given the right to access their personal data held by a company, obtain a copy of that information, and correct any errors. Consumers will also have the right to be forgotten and have their personal data deleted. Consumers can also choose to opt out of the processing of their personal data for targeted advertising,...
New Framework for Assessing the Privacy, Security, and Safety of Digital Health Technologies
The American College of Physicians (ACP), American Telemedicine Association (ATA), and the Organization for the Review of Care and Health Applications (ORCHA) have collaborated to produce a new framework for assessing the digital health technologies used by healthcare professionals and patients. Currently, more than 86 million Americans use a health or fitness app. These digital health technologies, which include more than 365,000 individual products, can collect, store, process, and transmit personal and health information that would be classed as protected health information (PHI) under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA); however, the majority of these technologies are not covered by HIPAA and fall outside of other regulations, federal laws, and government guidance. The lack of guidance in this area is hindering the adoption of digital health technologies, which have tremendous potential for improving condition management, clinical risk assessment, and decision support. The developers of digital health technologies often share user data collected by...
NIST Publishes Updated Cybersecurity Supply Chain Risk Management Guidance
On Thursday, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published updated cybersecurity supply chain risk management (C-SCRM) guidance to help organizations develop an effective program for identifying, assessing, and responding to cybersecurity risks throughout the supply chain. Cyber threat actors are increasingly targeting the supply chain. A successful attack on a single supplier can allow the threat actor to compromise the networks of all companies that use the product or service, as was the case with the REvil ransomware attack on Kaseya in 2021. The threat actors exploited a vulnerability in Kaseya VSA software and the attack affected up to 1,500 businesses. The publication, Cybersecurity Supply Chain Risk Management Practices for Systems and Organizations (NIST Special Publication 800-161 Revision 1), is the result of a multiyear process that included the release of two draft versions of the guidance. The updated guidance can be used to identify, assess, and respond to cybersecurity risks throughout the supply chain at all levels of an organization. While...
Average Ransom Payment Dropped by 34% in Q1, 2022
The average ransom payment in ransomware attacks fell by 34% in Q1, 2022, from an all-time high in Q4, 2021, according to ransomware incident response firm Coveware. The average ransom payment in Q1, 2022 was $211,259 and the median ransom payment was $73,906. The fall in total ransom payments has been attributed to several factors. Coveware suggests ransomware gangs have been targeting smaller organizations and issuing lower ransom demands, due to the increased scrutiny by law enforcement when attacks are conducted on large enterprises. The median company size has been falling since Q4, 2020, and is now companies with around 160 employees. This appears to be the sweet spot, where the companies have sufficient revenues to allow sizable ransoms to be paid, but not so large that attacks will result in considerable scrutiny by law enforcement. Another reason why total ransom payments have fallen is fewer victims of ransomware attacks have been paying the ransom. The number of victims of ransomware attacks that pay the ransom has been steadily declining, from 85% of victims in Q1 2019...



