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...
FBI Issues Warning About BEC Scams as Losses Increase to $43 Billion
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has issued a public service announcement warning about the threat of Business Email Compromise/Email Account Compromise (BEC/EAC) scams. The number of attacks reported to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) and the amount of money lost to these scams continues to grow each year, with losses to BEC/EAC scams increasing 65% between July 2019 and December 2021. BEC/EAC scams are the leading cause of losses to cybercrime. Between June 2016 and December 2021, IC3 received 241,206 complaints about domestic and international BEC/EAC attacks with reported losses of more than $43.3 billion. The IC3 2021 Internet Crime Report shows victims reported losses of $2.4 billion in 2021 across 19,954 complaints – around one-third of all losses to cybercrime in 2021. The actual losses to these scams are undoubtedly far higher, as many victims do not report the scams to the FBI, especially if the losses are relatively small. BEC/EAC scams involve compromising email accounts and using them to send emails to businesses and individuals who perform...
HHS Information Security Program Rated ‘Not Effective’
An audit of the Department of Health and Human Services conducted for the HHS’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) to assess compliance with the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014 (FISMA) in the fiscal year 2021 has seen the agency’s information security program rated ‘not effective’, as was the case in fiscal years 2018, 2019, and 2020. The audit was conducted at five of the 12 operating divisions of the HHS, although OIG did not state which five divisions were audited. In order to receive an effective rating, the HHS is required to reach the ‘Managed and Measurable’ maturity level for the Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, and Recover function areas, as required by DHS guidance and the FY 2021 Inspector General FISMA Reporting Metrics. OIG said in the report that the HHS has continued to make changes to strengthen the maturity of its enterprise-wide cybersecurity program and is making progress to sustain cybersecurity across all FISMA domains. The HHS security program strengthened the maturity of controls for several individual FISMA metrics,...
Operational Continuity-Cyber Incident Checklist Published by HSCC
The Health Sector Coordinating Council’s (HSCC) Cybersecurity Working Group (CWG) has published an Operational Continuity-Cyber Incident (OCCI) checklist which serves as a flexible template for responding to and recovering from serious cyberattacks that cause extended system outages, such as ransomware attacks. Ransomware attacks on healthcare organizations increased significantly during the pandemic and continue to be conducted at elevated levels. Ransomware threat actors steal sensitive data that has a high value on the black market, threaten to publish that data to pressure visitors into paying, and the extended system outages due to the attacks can cause considerable financial losses, increasing the probability of the ransom being paid. Warnings have recently been issued by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) about ransomware groups that are actively targeting critical infrastructure, including healthcare organizations. In addition to cybercriminal groups, hospitals are a target for nation-state threat...
Salusive Health Closes Business Following Cyberattack
Salusive Health, the developer of the myNurse platform which helps physician practices streamline disease management, has experienced a cyberattack in which patient data was compromised. In its breach notification letters to patients, Salusive Health explained that it identified unauthorized activity within its computer network on March 7, 2022, and immediately implemented containment, mitigation, and restoration efforts, and engaged third-party cybersecurity experts to assist with those processes. The investigation confirmed that unauthorized individuals accessed the personal and protected health information of patients, including name, gender, home address, phone number, email address, date of birth, medical history, diagnosis and treatment information, dates of service, lab test results, prescription information, provider name, medical account number, health insurance policy and group plan number, group plan provider, and claim information. Salusive Health said it implemented additional security measures to prevent further breaches, has notified affected individuals and offered...



