So what kind of month was February for breaches in the healthcare sector? Protenus has released its February Breach Barometer based on incidents compiled by this site. As a reminder: their analyses do not rely solely on HHS’s public breach tool. As in past months, insider incidents – whether accidental or intentional wrongdoing – comprised…
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Brand New Day notifies 14,005 members after breach at vendor
From their press release of March 10: Universal Care, Inc. dba Brand New Day (BND) announced today that it has notified individuals related to a privacy incident involving information stored by a third-party vendor. The incident did not involve information that was stored or maintained on BND’s own systems. On December 28, 2016, BND learned…
Newnan Woman Sentenced for Student Financial Aid Fraud; Used Patients’ Info
NEWNAN, Ga. – Andrea R. Williams has been sentenced to six years and seven months in federal prison for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft for using stolen identities to file dozens of fraudulent federal student aid applications. According to U.S. Attorney Horn, the charges and other information presented in court: From in or about…
UK: Private health firm fined £200,000 after IVF patients’ confidential conversations revealed online
From the Information Commissioner’s Office: The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has fined a private health company, HCA International Ltd, for failing to keep fertility patients’ personal information secure. The £200,000 monetary penalty has been issued as a result of an ICO investigation into the way the Lister Hospital was transferring, transcribing and storing records of IVF…
Patient info goes for how much on the dark web?
So the next time you read a report about how much money patient info goes for on the dark web or read estimates about $200/record, perhaps you should shop around, because medical records and health insurance info can be dirt cheap. This vendor will apparently sell you two patients’ records with their Social Security number, date…
The FTC’s Data Security Error: Treating Small Businesses Like The Fortune 1000
Gus Hurwitz has a great commentary on LabMD v. FTC and an amicus brief filed by privacy law scholars in support of the FTC. I say “great” because I agree with him completely. I hold the privacy law scholars who filed the brief in very high regard, but reading their brief, I felt like it was…