Cybersecurity

Cyber Threat Intelligence, Alerts and Reports
As part of the AHA’s commitment to helping hospitals and health systems prepare for and prevent cyber threats, we have gathered the latest government cyber threat intelligence and alerts and Health Information Sharing and Analysis Center (H-ISAC) reports.
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Cybersecurity & Risk Advisory
Learn how AHA can help hospitals and health systems prepare for and mitigate cyber threats through the expertise of John Riggi, AHA’s National Advisor for Cybersecurity and Risk.
The information provided in the report is pulled from threat actor data leak sites ‘as is,’ meaning, it is shared as it has been posted by the threat group.
Note: this joint Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA) is part of an ongoing #StopRansomware effort to publish advisories for network defenders that detail various ransomware variants and ransomware threat actors.
This week, Hacking Healthcare’s “Yes, This Is Still a Thing” department focuses on a new bill attempting to create a “comprehensive” federal data privacy law for the United States.
In response to Norway restricting Russian economic trade with primarily Russian settlements on the archipelago, Svalbard, Russia-sympathetic cybercriminals have launched a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack against Norwegian domains.
The information provided in the report is pulled from threat actor data leak sites ‘as is,’ meaning, it is shared as it has been posted by the threat group. They have been known to make mistakes, have typos, mis-name victims, or use other language aside from the victim name.
Meta, formally Facebook, products have been allegedly stealing medical information to sell to advertising companies.
The information provided in the report is pulled from threat actor data leak sites ‘as is,’ meaning, it is shared as it has been posted by the threat group. They have been known to make mistakes, have typos, mis-name victims, or use other language aside from the victim name.
AHA Friday voiced support for the Protecting and Transforming Cyber Health Care Act, legislation that would require medical device manufacturers to meet certain cybersecurity requirements when seeking approval for devices that are internet connected or include software
The American Hospital Association (AHA) writes in support of the Protecting and Transforming Cyber Health Care (PATCH) Act (S.3983). AHA and its members are strongly committed to preparing for and preventing cyber-attacks.
This week, Hacking Healthcare begins by examining new telehealth guidance from HHS that looks to address how HIPAA-covered entities can continue to provide certain telehealth services while remaining compliant with the HIPAA privacy and security requirements.