The Internet of Things is making hospitals more vulnerable to hackers
The attack potential grows exponentially as IoT technologies are implemented, warns European cyber security agency.
The attack potential grows exponentially as IoT technologies are implemented, warns European cyber security agency.
With ransomware attacks increasing, legislations have been mooted as a way to bar companies from paying up and further fuelling such activities, but such policies can be difficult to enforce and may result in more dire consequences.
Software that combs through files for viruses, worms and spyware brings the security company a U.S. patent.
As ever more mobile and IoT devices connect to the internet, the potential for damaging cyberattacks can only increase. How can organisations begin to get the upper hand over the burgeoning cast of 'bad actors'?
GE Healthcare is embarking on a massive effort to help healthcare providers reconfigure vulnerable devices.
"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." Except when you're hit by ransomware.
Orangeworm hacking group carefully selects victims in highly targeted attacks.
Heart patients will have to visit their doctors to have their pacemakers patched for the "voluntary" recall -- but there are risks.
Government describes attack as "deliberate, targeted, well-planned" and assures no medical data has been tampered with, but security vendors warn compromised data may end up for sale on the Dark Web.
What incentives can we put in place to cut needless imaging? And what impact would that have on medical inflation?