The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency announced Feb. 13 that it will host a series of virtual town hall meetings to gather public input on rulemaking for the Cyber Incident Reporting for Critical Infrastructure Act of 2022. The meetings will begin March 9, according to a Federal Register notice. The proposed rule, issued in March 2024, would require critical infrastructure organizations, including hospitals and health systems, to report a cyber incident to the federal government within 72 hours and ransom payments within 24 hours, among other requirements. The AHA commented on the proposed rule, calling the requirements redundant to those from other federal agencies and that they add unnecessary burden to hospitals working to ensure access to needed services during a cybersecurity incident response.

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FBI Co-deputy Director Andrew Bailey discussed a rise in cyber and physical threats impacting health care. He discussed health care as the top critical…
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Health care and public health was the top sector targeted for cyberthreats in 2025, according to the FBI’s latest annual report on internet crimes. There were…
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The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency released an alert March 27 on a vulnerability in F5 BIG-IP Access Policy Manager software that is being…
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The FBI released an alert March 20 warning of a technique used by cyber actors working on behalf of the Iranian government to conduct malicious cyber activity…
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The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency March 18 released an alert urging U.S. organizations to harden their endpoint management systems following…
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The Health Sector Coordinating Council Cyber Working Group and Health-ISAC (Information Sharing and Analysis Center) will host a joint cybersecurity event July…