Mary Anne Pazanowski reports: A Utah physician can proceed with several claims against a former employee who allegedly stole a computer hard drive containing patient information and used it to support a False Claims Act complaint against the physician, a federal court in the state said. Sherman Sorensen’s second amended complaint alleged enough facts to…
Category: U.S.
A Hacker’s Scheme is “Forthright;” Thus, No Computer Fraud Coverage for Ransomware Attacks
From the good-to-know dept., Timothy A. Carroll and Joshua A. Mooney of White and Williams LLP write: A computer hacker may engage in malicious and criminal conduct, but that doesn’t mean that the conduct is “fraudulent.” In G&G Oil Company v. Continental Western Ins. Co., 2020 Ind. App. LEXIS 126 (Ind. Ct. App. Mr. 31, 2020),…
ReportaClaim may need to report a leak
Pennsylvania-headquartered ReportaClaim.net describes itself as gateway for stand alone companies, professional employer organizations (PEOs), staffing companies, and their clients to submit worker injury reports. In order to do that, they necessarily collect a lot of personal and medically-related information such as the employee’s full name, the employer, the employee’s job position, the date of injury,…
WI: EVERSANA reports breach of protected health information that occurred in 2019
EVERSANA, a global commercial services provider to healthcare entities, has disclosed a data breach that occurred between between April 1 and July 3, 2019. The breach reportedly affected patient data stored in a legacy technology environment, which has since been updated. According to their notification, “Upon notification of unusual email activity, the firm immediately conducted…
Alert from OCR: Individual Posing as OCR Investigator
From OCR, this alert: It has come to OCR’s attention that an individual posing as an OCR Investigator has contacted HIPAA covered entities in an attempt to obtain protected health information (PHI). The individual identifies themselves on the telephone as an OCR investigator, but does not provide an OCR complaint transaction number or any other…
Marriott data breach exposes personal data of 5.2 million guests
Keumars Afifi-Sabet reports: Marriott has informed 5.2 million guests that their personal details were inappropriately accessed in a possible data breach. Contacts details, loyalty account information, company, gender, birthday, partnerships and affiliations and room preferences were among guests’ details accessed between mid-January and February 2020. Read more on ITPro.