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Security Apple

Apple Report Finds Steep Increase in Data Breaches, Ransomware (axios.com) 12

Data breaches and ransomware attacks are getting worse. Some 2.6 billion personal records have been exposed in data breaches over the past two years and that number continues to grow, according to a new report commissioned by Apple. From a report: Apple says the escalating intrusions, combined with increases in ransomware means the tech industry needs to move toward greater use of encryption. According to the report, prepared by MIT professor emeritus Stuart E. Madnick:

1. Data breaches in the US through the first nine months of the year are already 20% higher than for all of 2022.
2. Nearly 70 percent more ransomware attacks were reported through September 2023, than in the first three quarters of 2022.
3. Americans and those in the UK topped the list of those most targeted in ransomware attacks in 2023, followed by Canada and Australia. Those four countries accounted for nearly 70% of reported ransomware attacks.
4. One in four people in the US had their health data exposed in a data breach during the first nine months of 2023.

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Apple Report Finds Steep Increase in Data Breaches, Ransomware

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  • Ransomware Gangs: "We're encrypting as fast as we can!"
  • #4 makes me mad! (Score:4, Informative)

    by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Friday December 08, 2023 @01:08PM (#64066831) Homepage
    I live in Canada, but we have laughably bad security policy for our health care data, and data practices in general. When you hear: "A hospital got hacked", or "the hospital's data service provider got hacked.", why does it follow (usually), "X number of records were exposed." Why don't we store the records encrypted and separate from the keys needed to decrypt them?

    In Ontario, Canada, we don't take the most basic / elementary precautions into account when handling health data. My partner is a nurse, and her work notebook is packed full of unencrypted health data, and if not electronic, it's literally on paper. Health care records aren't required to be encrypted or protected in transit, in storage, or in use. If someone at a doctor's office, hospital, or clinic faxes (which is still a thing) your health care records, it will sit on a fax machines waiting for everyone who walks by, to read it. If those people email it, you better hope the email server provider doesn't take a look, because that data is unencrypted, and if you ask them to encrypt it, they will say no.

    If you involve the Privacy Commissioner, they'll go on about how fax is safer and more secure than email, because of a policy written in 2006. If your health records get sent to the wrong place, well that's on you (seriously), not the person, or group who sent them. If a doctor's office shuts down, and they don't give you the files, and don't forward or return them, they might be destroyed, or thrown into the garbage as printed records. If they weren't printed, they'll probably be sitting on an unencrypted hard drive. If the records were destroyed, you have no recourse, and in one case I found my records in a pile of other people's records, sitting on the floor in a construction zone, having been dumped from a shelf.

    When health care data is getting exposed, no one should be surprised. It's intentionally by design of the total lack of care anyone gives to sensitive data.
  • Name 4 countries that are part of 5 Eyes....

    State sponsored ?

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