Cybersecurity and Privacy
J.P. Morgan's Stuart Hanson outlines three strategies for organizations looking to keep pace with digital transformation spurred by COVID-19.
Thirty mobile health apps from larger healthcare information technology companies were susceptible to a broken object level authorization (BOLA) attack.
The new national data guardian will oversee the collection and use of patient data.
In a new investigation by Amnesty International, the two Gulf states and Norway have released apps that reportedly operate as mass surveillance tools.
The error allowed a patient to access video recordings of another patient’s consultation.
An International Digital Accountability Council report is the latest suggesting that a number of COVID-19 apps are missing key security measures.
A new Babel Street report found a spike in coronavirus related drug mentions on rouge pharmacy sites in mid-March and early-April.
Of 50 worldwide COVID-19 apps analyzed in Nature Medicine, only 16 promised to anonymize, encrypt and secure the data they collect.
This month we look at how the COVID-19 pandemic is fundamentally changing healthcare organizations' approaches to security, now and in the future.
According to an Amnesty International investigation, personal information, including names, national ID numbers, health status and location data could have been exposed.