Thousands of Patient Records Held for Ransom in Ontario Home Care Data Breach, Attackers Claim (www.cbc.ca) 33
CBC reports: The detailed medical histories and contact information of possibly tens of thousands of home-care patients in Ontario are allegedly being held for ransom by thieves who recently raided the computer systems of a health-care provider. CarePartners, which provides home medical care services on behalf of the Ontario government, announced last month that it had been breached. It said only that personal health and financial information of patients had been "inappropriately accessed," and did not elaborate further. However, a group claiming responsibility for the breach recently contacted CBC News and provided a sample of the data it claims to have accessed, shedding new light on the extent of the breach. The sample includes thousands of patient medical records with phone numbers and addresses, dates of birth, and health card numbers, as well as detailed medical histories including past conditions, diagnoses, surgical procedures, care plans and medications for patients across the province.
Once again . . . (Score:4, Insightful)
Once again, a company that is supposed to protect sensitive personal information fails to provide available security measures and exposes sensitive personal information to a host of bad actors. This kind of neglect usually is not at the IT level, but all the way at the top.
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The problem is they can avoid the fines by taking precautions that turn out to fail.
Instead they should be required to ensure records are not leaked, and the breach itself should incur a fine.
The fine should not be capped, but should be AT LEAST as many dollars as the attackers stand to gain by selling the information leaked.... that is fine $10,000 or so per person whose Times the Number of People who PII were in the record system that were leaked for sure, and 50% of that for any person w
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This kind of neglect usually is not at the IT level, but all the way at the top.
HAH. While I am not certain about this particular company, when these companies are only engaged in neglect, it's a win. (There are some good staff at some of the companies, but they generally have to keep their noses down because of the culture. If you did real undercover inspections of elder care in Ontario you would be terrified.)
Re:Once again . . . (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, protecting sensitive data is an important corporate responsibility, but you seem to be placing 100% of the blame on the victim.
Having worked as a System Administrator, I can tell you it's not easy to make anything completely secure. There are zero-day exploits. There are hackers who reverse engineer the latest security patches before you arrive at work and have a chance to evaluate & install them. There are extremely talented individuals who work relentlessly, day and night, to find new ways to circumvent your defenses.
So when, inevitably, someone's security is breached, save a bit of your condemnation for the person(s) committing the crime. There are people holding companies for ransom with no regard for the amount of damage they create. This is what's truly reprehensible.
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I can tell you it's not easy to make anything completely secure.
And yet there are PLENTY of possible precautions which businesses ignore, because they're too inconvenient to employees or too great a negative impact to the cost savings from using electronic systems instead of paper-based systems.
Note: There is no obligation to put customer's data in an electronic system. Paper-based systems not connected to any global network have worked for thousands of years and never had a "zero day" exploit --
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The problem is created by the supposed victim businesses making dunderheaded design decisions...
They are not supposed victims. They are victims.
You might as well argue that if someone robs my house I'm to blame because I could have purchased a stronger lock for my door. Or that I'm causing crime by keeping possessions in a house because no lock is infallible.
In today's world, it is not "gross negligence" to connect a business system to the Internet. It's a typical requirement. Nobody is going back to paper-based systems, and if you would seriously advocate that you are out of touch.
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You might as well argue that if someone robs my house I'm to blame because I could have purchased a stronger lock for my door.
It's a bad analogy. Presumably the stuff in your house is YOURs, and nobody other than you suffers a loss when it gets stolen.
When we're talking about patient records --- the stuff you are "securing" is other people's stuff.
And putting it on an information system connected to the internet is like putting it in buckets or boxes spread out in a massive field protected only b
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In the US, you can't even charge pregnant women more that wait until up to two months after birth to buy coverage, and the coverage is back dated by up to two months. My sister waited until after my poor niece was born early and had to spend two weeks in the hospital. She saved thousands by not buying insurance, abused the system, then dropped coverage after the first month since it covered everything she needed. It's too easy to game the system.
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That's actually why the ACA had a penalty for not being insured. Trump and the GOP did away with that hoping to make it all blow up since they couldn't manage to repeal it properly after trying 85 times.
In turn, the penalty was a problem because too many red states did their best to make it hard to get coverage.
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Wait, you don't think your health insurance provider knows your medical history? Do you think they just blindly pay whatever is submitted without knowing what they are paying for and why they are paying it?
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If you have a policy that does not include pre-existing conditions (you don't since it is illegal), then the insurer will both do an examination of you and ask your medical history. No need for 'leaked' records. If you lie, that is fraud.
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Why is it every time healthcare in the US is talked about, foreign trolls come out of the woodwork?
In the US, you cannot charge more for preexisting conditions. You can't even charge more for voluntary preexisting conditions such as pregnancy, self-harm, or alcoholism.
Enough with this bullshit (Score:1)
Screw the "civilized" way of dealing with this kind of filth. Track them down, find them, kill them.
This kind of scum is cancer, and must be delth with accordingly.
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Ransom? (Score:2)