Security vulnerabilities in hospital equipment include "passwords like ‘admin' or '1234'” http://www.wired.com/2014/04/hospital-equipment-vulnerable/ …
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Considering conversion to Christian Science. http://www.wired.com/2014/04/hospital-equipment-vulnerable/ …
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@sarahjeong I blame it all on Obama. If he hadn't made them fight the ACA, they might have had time to pass laws to protect people. o_O -
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@sarahjeong laws are pointless as long as we just take them at their word. You'd think this might be a better place to spend cash.
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@sarahjeong Health care IT is embedded device land with extra regulatory requirements. This means far worse security, not better. -
@Dymaxion but regulatory requirements now include onus on vendors to provide good security + no req for 2nd FDA approval after a patch
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@sarahjeong why would a defibrillator need bluetooth anyway? Some kinda monitoring thing maybe... -
@PaulGowder “for writing configurations and doing test shocks [against the patient] when they’re implanted or after surgery,” -
@sarahjeong oh dear. Yeah, wouldn't want that to be terribly hackable. Some kind of cyberpunk dystopia nightmare: the defib hit man.
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