A healthcare design debate is really a systems debate: if care must follow the patient, then health data, workflow software, and AI governance have to move together.
In healthcare and other regulated environments, DPIA and ISO/IEC 27005 matter because risk only drops when it is managed as a living process, not a one-time document.
Digital health is moving away from isolated hospital software and toward interoperable systems, turning data exchange, continuity of care, and access control into one shared technical problem.
A claimed Akira victim page naming Centre Ellipse is a reminder that healthcare extortion is often about data leverage, not just locked screens.
An attacker-controlled listing tied to WCM Remedium does not prove a breach, but it does spotlight how healthcare operations, billing, and patient flow can become pressure points in extortion campaigns.
A Black x victim post names Wonjin Plastic Surgery, yet the public record stops at allegation and leaves the real security questions unanswered.
The real security challenge in healthcare is not scanning paper into a database, but making clinical data usable across systems without losing control, traceability, or trust.
A public health system built around unified records, cloud services, and clinical AI can improve care fast - but it also concentrates risk, governance, and accountability in one place.
A public “pay or leak” post tied to DentaQuest.com is not proof of breach, but it is a reminder that modern extortion can be built on disclosure pressure alone.
Healthcare’s real exposure is no longer a single network edge: it is the mix of remote access, shared workstations, and AI workflows that can move sensitive data in ways legacy controls were never built to understand.
Major British rehab provider falls prey to notorious cybercrime gang, raising fears over patient privacy and healthcare security.
A notorious ransomware group claims to have breached Expeditor Systems, threatening the safety of sensitive healthcare data across thousands of clinics.
A suite of dangerous vulnerabilities in Orthanc’s DICOM server software threatens healthcare systems worldwide, exposing them to data leaks, system crashes, and remote code execution.
As doctors rush to adopt unsanctioned AI tools, hospitals face a silent explosion of cyber risks and data chaos.
Cybercriminals target a major Japanese healthcare provider, putting patient data and essential services at risk.
Global healthcare giant Stryker races to recover after a disruptive cyber assault threatens medical device supply chains worldwide.
The notorious Genesis gang claims a fresh victim, targeting Raphael Ortho in a cyberattack that raises new concerns for healthcare security.
After a cyberattack disrupted its operations, Stryker moves quickly to contain the threat and begin recovery.
A new ransomware leak exposes the vulnerabilities of healthcare providers-and the high stakes for patient privacy.