H-ISAC: White Reports

This edition of Hacking Healthcare includes an examination of how COVID-19 led the United Kingdom’s (UK) National Health Service (NHS) to give the country’s intelligence and security agency emergency powers over its networks.
In this edition of Hacking Healthcare, we begin with a discussion of the H-ISAC’s media kit on medical device security and coordinated vulnerability disclosure and how it will help educate media partners and the general public on those critical issues.
In this edition of Hacking Healthcare, we begin with a discussion of the H-ISAC’s media kit on medical device security and coordinated vulnerability disclosure and how it will help educate media partners and the general public on those critical issues. Next, we briefly explore the potential…
In this edition of Hacking Healthcare, we tackle three significant document releases that will affect numerous aspects of the healthcare sector. First, we dive into the final report issued by the Cyberspace Solarium Commission and recap a handful of recommendations that are likely to have the…
This edition of Hacking Healthcare, explores the German Patient Data Protection Act that is under criticism for its approach to cybersecurity and privacy; briefly examines the interesting effect the United States’ naming and shaming of Chinese state hackers is having; and breaks down why DNS over…
This edition of Hacking Healthcare, breaksdown new guidance from the Department of Justice (DOJ) on the legal considerations of engaging in cyber threat intelligence activities; examines the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity’s (ENISA) 51-page report on procurement cybersecurity for…
This edition of Hacking Healthcare, breaks down a new bill that will expand digitization of health records in the Netherlands. And briefs you on how the United States (US) National Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST) commitment to supporting their new Privacy Framework is good news for…
This edition of Hacking Healthcare includes a notice from the FDA looking for nominations for the Patient Engagement Advisory Committee, along with an examine the results of a KPMG report on how artificial intelligence (“AI”) is viewed by various industries among other resources.
In this edition of Hacking Healthcare, you will find an analysis of the coronavirus that tries to cut through the media sensationalism to explore a more nuanced perspective of its impacts along with an examination of why the anonymization of data is often more marketing myth than security fact.