Cybersecurity Government Intelligence Reports

The American Hospital Association (AHA) Cybersecurity and Risk Advisory Service share cybersecurity government intelligence reports that are vital to the security of hospitals and health systems.

The cybersecurity authorities of the United Kingdom (NCSC-UK), Australia (ACSC), Canada (CCCS), New Zealand (NCSC-NZ), and the United States (CISA), (NSA), (FBI) are aware of recent reports that observe an increase in malicious cyber activity targeting managed service providers (MSPs) and expect…
In April 2022, vulnerabilities in common information systems relevant to the health sector have been released that require attention.
In April 2022, vulnerabilities in common information systems relevant to the health sector have been released that require attention.
This is a revision of FLASH CP-000165-TT, originally published 18 March 2022 and titled “Cyber Actors Perform Increased Reconnaissance of US Energy Sector Networks from Russia-Based IP Addresses.”
Leading up to Russia’s unprovoked attack against Ukraine, threat actors deployed destructive malware against organizations in Ukraine to destroy computer systems and render them inoperable.
U.S., Australian, Canadian, New Zealand, and UK cybersecurity authorities assess, in 2021, malicious cyber actors aggressively targeted newly disclosed critical software vulnerabilities against broad target sets, including public and private sector organizations worldwide.
The cybersecurity authorities of the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom are releasing this joint Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA).
As of March 2022, BlackCat/ALPHV ransomware as a service (RaaS) had compromised at least 60 entities worldwide and is the first ransomware group to do so successfully using RUST, considered to be a more secure programming language that offers improved performance and reliable concurrent processing.