From wikipedia for those, like me, that don’t know about ISO27001 :
ISO/IEC 27001 requires that management:
Systematically examine the organization’s information security risks, taking account of the threats, vulnerabilities, and impacts;
Design and implement a coherent and comprehensive suite of information security controls and/or other forms of risk treatment (such as risk avoidance or risk transfer) to address those risks that are deemed unacceptable; and
Adopt an overarching management process to ensure that the information security controls continue to meet the organization’s information security needs on an ongoing basis.
A lot of healthcare facilities are running EOL operating systems like Windows XP or Windows 7 because the programs they use for billing or other reasons are stuck on that version. You would be shocked at how prominent this is across most “modern” infrastructure. The resistance to change stems from a “if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it” mentality. Pagers are still the most reliable ways to reach a doctor, which is why they’re still used, not because they’re necessarily the most secure.
As easy as it is to point blame at “duh boomers” the situation with healthcare in particular is much more nuanced. Though I do agree that any luddites in charge of major hospitals are not helping the situation at all.
@sunzu@neme@luc891@kryllic One problem is that affected customers who walk away never to return are hidden on the bottom line by new customers that replace them. Businesses don’t care about disatisfied customers, not when they have all the customers they can handle.
Think of lost business as collateral damage or cost of doing business. The share holders can’t see the lost revenue so it isn’t “lost revenue.”
From wikipedia for those, like me, that don’t know about ISO27001 :
ISO/IEC 27001 requires that management:
Systematically examine the organization’s information security risks, taking account of the threats, vulnerabilities, and impacts;
Design and implement a coherent and comprehensive suite of information security controls and/or other forms of risk treatment (such as risk avoidance or risk transfer) to address those risks that are deemed unacceptable; and
Adopt an overarching management process to ensure that the information security controls continue to meet the organization’s information security needs on an ongoing basis.
I guess this is something that US hospitals should be doing considering they always getting hit.
I wonder if the brain dead boomers in charge even know what cybersecurity is?
A lot of healthcare facilities are running EOL operating systems like Windows XP or Windows 7 because the programs they use for billing or other reasons are stuck on that version. You would be shocked at how prominent this is across most “modern” infrastructure. The resistance to change stems from a “if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it” mentality. Pagers are still the most reliable ways to reach a doctor, which is why they’re still used, not because they’re necessarily the most secure.
As easy as it is to point blame at “duh boomers” the situation with healthcare in particular is much more nuanced. Though I do agree that any luddites in charge of major hospitals are not helping the situation at all.
Don’t these people get paid to “lead”
Amazing how they can get away collecting checks, fucking up and still keeping their jobs…
How many times can fastfood cook botch the order before, he or she is let go?
@sunzu @neme @luc891 @kryllic One problem is that affected customers who walk away never to return are hidden on the bottom line by new customers that replace them. Businesses don’t care about disatisfied customers, not when they have all the customers they can handle.
Think of lost business as collateral damage or cost of doing business. The share holders can’t see the lost revenue so it isn’t “lost revenue.”
we we talking hospital specifically or more broadly here?