
Cybersecurity law’s expiration could harm hospitals: Former FBI leader
The expiration of a 2015 federal cybersecurity law could put hospitals and health systems at risk for more cyberattacks, a former FBI leader wrote in Fortune.
The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 has enabled rapid threat intelligence sharing between government and businesses, including thousands this year alone, preventing “countless” hacks over the past decade, according to the Aug. 17 article by Cynthia Kaiser, former deputy director of the FBI’s cyber department.
“If information sharing degrades after CISA 2015’s sunset, hospitals–and all other critical infrastructure — very likely will lose crucial early warnings about ransomware variants and other attack methods,” she wrote. “When a hospital’s systems are threatened, rapid information sharing matters. Minutes count in medical emergencies, and delays can be fatal.”
Ms. Kaiser pointed to research from Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.-based University of Minnesota that estimated ransomware attacks killed between 42 and 67 Medicare patients from 2016 to 2021.
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