Months After Hacks, DHS Sends a Warning About Hospital Ransomware (vice.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Since February, at least a dozen hospitals have been affected by ransomware, malware that encrypts a victim's files until they cough up a bounty to the hackers. In response, US-CERT, the country's Computer Emergency Readiness Team, issued an alert on March 31 warning potential victims of the risks, and how to protect themselves. But, considering that some hospitals have already had to divert emergency services, push high-risk operations to future dates, and even turn away some patients, is the alert too little, too late?
To Hospital Facility,
Hello, my name is Mandori Tugelli, and I am a foreign national from the country of Nigeria. With great sadness and events my great uncle has passed away. To help in my sorrow I have learned that my uncle has left me a very large inheritance. Unfortunately to collect this money I require the help of a USA business such as yours because my uncle left all his funds in US Dollars. If you could kindly click the link provided below and fill out the banking information for you business I will gladly offer you 50% of the proceeds for helping me collect my inheritance.
Kind Regards,
Mr. Mandori Tugelli
Someone is fucking lying. Nevermind, I've been told everyone is fucking lying.
I happened to be watching broadcast TV yesterday and I saw a PSA put on by some kind of law enforcement organization.
The PSA was about public wifi hotspots and told people to turn off their wifi when they leave the house and if you do connect to a public wifi hotspot, don't do e-commerce or other sensitive transactions.
I was floored. It was such a good and informative message I couldn't believe its source.
Perhaps there is a governmental push for these types of messages now...
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
Obligatory loosely-related Monty Python bit: Now I know some hospitals where you get the patients lying around in bed... well that's not how we do things here, right!
Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
what a SLASHVERTISEMENT is?
I for one refuse to work for hospitals. Not only do they treat IT like plumbers and do not respect them if they have no PHD, but they run XP SP 2 ... SP 3 might be ready someday??! They use IE 6 and IE 7. Their cisco routers are turn of the century and still BSD Unix based.
Oh and it is IT's fault if they get ransomware.
The whole FDA certification created this mess! But worse, insurance companies are nickle and diming their budgets. If XP works DON"T touch it.
If people used WIndows 8/10 (yeah it looks funny boo hiss ) with secureboot it wouldn't load half of these ransomware as rootkits could be blocked.
A lesson here for those who use XP with no updates with a smile :-) ... if it happened to them it could happen to you.
http://saveie6.com/
ALERT: The horse has escaped the barn! Please secure the barn door immediately!
SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
Most ransomware comes disguised as a legitimate email and the user is stupid enough to open the zip file, run the javascript, and then ok the .exe file that is downloaded and executed. Some basic security measures would fix this but it has zero to do with Windows.
You can't stop stupid. Especially if the employee doesn't care as he or she doesn't own the computer. If it is from a boss they will open it.
However, you can block with GPO's, security updates, modern endpoint protection AV suites, and even have ports in Cisco routers shut off during detection with network protection services.
XP is not patched. It won't be updated. You can't block everything. ALSR and sandboxing cuts back on holes. network protection services has better support in a modern OS to prevent spreads.
http://saveie6.com/
What? You can filter email easily. You can also protect your environment with a proxy server with filtering. Very inexpensively (if not free) and prevent viruses from entering your old Windows XP environment.
Hello IT! This is the director of Internal Medicine WHERE DID MY PDF files from Labcorp. I have patient lives REQUIRING THIS PDFS. Get em up!
http://saveie6.com/
Medstar's infection didn't come in via email, it was a web server hack.
I find it amazing that none of these hospitals are making regular backups of their files. Storage is not the expensive part.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Ransomware has been around for quite a long time. The solution (backups, training, patching, etc) have, too. So am I upset that DHS hasn't already issued a warning about a threat that's been around longer than DHS? No. Anybody responsible for medical IT security already knows. Now, whether they're actually allowed to do anything about it may be a different story entirely.
I was the Director of Network Services for a small community bank. Since we were an FDIC insured bank, we were regulated by the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS).
We were never permitted to run any software or hardware that was not supported by the manufacturer. We also had tons of security requirements (intrusion detection, the most restrictive permissions delegated to allow someone to do their job, putting all internet facing devices in a DMZ, database auditing and logging...etc...etc...etc).
I've never worked IT in healthcare. How does a provider of medical services not have similar regulatory requirements?
Anyone who reads US-CERT alerts probably wouldn't be in their predicament to begin with.
The solution is to totally ban Microsoft Windows in Hospitals:
"Microsoft excludes all implied warranties and conditions, including those of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement." ref