'You can’t undo that damage': How safe is your health data?
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Not every data breach is a cybersecurity issue, but hackers are increasingly looking for weak systems to collect information for intelligence reasons, fraudulent insurance claims, identity theft and “ransomware”, where a malicious program stops a user from accessing devices until a payment is made.
However, even in the world’s most online security-focused countries like Israel, which was among the first to digitise health records, protecting medical organisations is a relatively recent consideration.
Speaking at Tel Aviv University’s annual international cybersecurity conference, Cyber Week 2018, professor Isaac Ben-Israel, head of the Blavatnik Interdisciplinary cyber research centre and chairman of the conference, said he had focused on cybersecurity for decades but health was often overlooked.
In 1999, when working for the Israel Defence Forces, Professor Ben-Israel gave the Israeli government a 36-strong list of critical infrastructure, from power production and water supply to banking, under threat from cyber attacks. Healthcare was not added to the list until 2010.
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