Law Enforcement Health Benefits (LEHB), health and welfare funds for Philadelphia police offers, sheriffs, and county detectives, disclosed that the company was hit by a ransomware attack in 2021. "The Conti ransomware group has been responsible for a large number of these incidents, successfully attacking at least 16 US healthcare organizations and first responder networks during the year – as well as Ireland’s Health Service Executive and Department of Health," writes The Daily Swig.
According to LEHB, attackers started coding files stored in the company network on 14 September 2021. An inquiry into the issue revealed that on Friday 25th, 'few affected files' containing members' data might have been excluded from the network by threat actors. Suspicious access to the US Department of Health and Human Services (HSS) breach portal hints that more than 85,000 users from LEHB may have been impacted by the incident. The compromised data includes names, DoBs, Social Security numbers, driving license info, bank account numbers, and health information.
However, every LEHB member wasn't affected, and the data elements mentioned above were also not the same for every member. LEHB denies any case of identity theft or abuse of compromised data from the ransomware hit. However, the incident impacted members and offered credit monitoring services to those whose Social Security numbers might have been used. The health plan provider suggests its members set up 'fraud alerts' and security freezes on credit files, and ask for a free credit report.
Cyber attack incidents are getting sophisticated as each day passes, resulting in LEHB implementing extra precautionary steps to protect its network and enhance internal procedures to detect and mitigate future cybersecurity threats. LEHB is assessing and updating its company policies and procedures to reduce the chances of ransomware incidents in the future.
The Daily Swig reports "the healthcare sector has been particularly hard hit by ransomware since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, with the FBI’s 2021 Internet Crime Report revealing earlier this month that of all critical infrastructure sectors, it was healthcare that faced the most ransomware attacks last year."
According to a new study from Veracode, more than 82% (4/5th) of public sector apps have security vulnerabilities, the highest found in any industry. The experts also found that the apps in the public sector take twice the time to get patch the flaws once identified, compared to other industry security fixes. Besides this, around 60% of flaws in third-party libraries in the public sector haven't been patched for two years. It is twice the time frame compared to industry data and almost 15 months behind the cross-industry average.
The report is based on the data collected via 20 million scans across half a million apps in the public sector, financial services, manufacturing, retail, healthcare, technology, and hospitality. Veracode simplifies AppSec programs by combining five application security analysis types in one solution, integrated into the development pipeline. With comprehensive analysis, you’re covered today and as your program evolves Joint lowest fix rate for vulnerability in the public sector is 22% which is the lowest.
The study suggests that public sector organizations are more prone to software supply chain attacks because they are more vulnerable, for instance, solar winds, which led to huge disruptions and breaches of critical data. Fortunately, the findings suggest that public sector entities have improved in battling high severity flaws. As per analysis, high-level flaws were found in 16% of public sector apps and the total numbers fell by 30% in the last year.
The experts believe that the data hints toward new government cybersecurity measures. Public sector lawmakers and politicians know that dated technology and a large amount of sensitive data are the reason for public organizations to become a primary target for hackers.
This is why Congress and the White House are working together to update regulations that govern cybersecurity compliance. "In January, President Biden signed a National Security Memorandum (NSM) requiring national security systems to implement network cybersecurity measures that are at least as good as those required of federal civilian networks. Earlier this month, the US passed new legislation that will force critical infrastructure companies to report cyber incidents within 72 hours" reports Infosecurity.