Thursday, December 28, 2017

Pay Now Or Pay Even More Later - Ep 134


Is HIPAA compliance expensive?  Or, is it short-sighted to only worry about what HIPAA compliance costs?  A new report from Ponemon Institute, The True Cost of Compliance with Data Protection Regulations, looks at compliance costs across several industries and multinational organizations. The study has a lot of details as we always expect from Ponemon Institute.  

Read more at HelpMeWithHIPAA.com/134


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Thursday, December 21, 2017

2017 Blooper Episode - Happy Holidays


Each year Bojan Sabioncello, our audio engineer in Split, Croatia, puts together his blooper roll to mock us.  Granted, he spends the whole year having to listen to us without a chance to respond until now.  This his only chance to respond to a year’s worth of our comments and screw-ups.

We will be back next week with a new episode.   Happy Holidays from the whole Help Me With HIPAA team!


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Friday, December 15, 2017

Cybersecurity Naughty List 2017 - Ep 133


As 2017 comes to a close, we are making our lists and checking them twice.  Time to find out who we thought was more naughty than nice this year.  The Naughty List 2017 discussion includes everything from big news data breaches such as Equifax and Uber down to stolen hard drives and password issues.  Feel free to add your naughty list nominations in the comments.

More info at HelpMeWithHIPAA.com/133


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Thursday, December 7, 2017

Five Phishing Findings From Google - Ep 131


A new report on phishing was recently released titled: Data Breaches, Phishing, or Malware? Understanding the Risks of Stolen Credentials. The report of findings from a study that was done by Google, University of California, Berkeley, and the International Computer Science Institute.  It was a year-long study of account hijacking, stolen credentials, phishing and malware attacks.  The findings are clear that phishing is a problem in ways we may not have thought before now.  In the study, the researchers followed other hacker methods used against email addresses they found on the darknet sites for sale. The search netted 12.4 million addresses that were determined to be potential victims of phishing kits out of the total 1.9 billion usernames and passwords exposed by data breaches. So, it is obvious that this isn’t a tiny study over a short amount of time.

For more info go to HelpMeWithHIPAA.com/131


Check out the episode!