Ransomware, phishing, and human weaknesses are serious cyber risks to health IT infrastructure amid COVID-19, which makes it crucial to improve security to combat evolving threats.
Months into remote work, many small businesses are still unprepared for their employees to work securely at home.
It is always important for businesses to ensure their employees work securely, both at the office and home, as threat actors continually look for ways to attack. However, helping employees work safely while remote is more critical than ever due to the impact of two trends – the dramatic increase of people working from home…
Data breach. Ransomware. Insider threat. Disinformation. Misinformation. Social media manipulation.
Many healthcare organizations have under-resourced security teams, putting them at higher risk for cyber incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic that could result in patient harm, warns cybersecurity expert Joshua Corman.
With National Cybersecurity Awareness Month shining a spotlight on the healthcare industry, security pros share best practices for those charged with protecting these essential organizations.
With more people working from home, it’s never been more important to make your home safe from cybercriminals.
CISA senior advisor Josh Corman said healthcare CIOs should focus on threat modeling and stronger disaster recovery for better healthcare cybersecurity.
Bad actors use machine learning to break passwords more quickly and build malware that knows how to hide, experts warn.