National Advisor for Cybersecurity and Risk at the American Hospital Association - Helping Protect Healthcare in America
TOP NEWS - Administration releases national strategy to strengthen cybersecurity The Biden Administration today released a National Cybersecurity Strategy that seeks to strengthen collaboration with stakeholders to defend critical infrastructure; disrupt and dismantle threat actors; shape market forces to drive security and resilience; invest in a resilient future; and forge international partnerships to pursue shared goals. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence of the National Cyber Director is coordinating the strategy, which also aims to shift responsibility for cybersecurity from the end user to the owners and operators of data systems, and realign incentives to favor long-term investments in security, resilience and promising new technologies. “The American Hospital Association commends the Biden Administration on this comprehensive National Cybersecurity Strategy, which acknowledges that private sector efforts alone are insufficient to counter the significant cyberthreats we face as a nation,” said John Riggi, AHA’s national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. “The AHA has worked closely with Congress and the Administration, including the FBI, Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency, and Department of Health and Human Services to underscore the magnitude of the national security threat and public health and safety impact of ransomware attacks on hospitals and health systems. Health care cyberattacks are threat-to-life crimes that disrupt and delay health care delivery, and cybersecurity is a top priority. Since 2020, the AHA has urged the federal government to adopt policies similar to those used in the fight against terrorism — utilizing all elements of national power to disrupt and dismantle foreign-based bad actors. We are pleased that the strategy includes several important ideas such as declaring ransomware attacks as a national security threat; conducting more offensive operations against cyberthreat actors; and implementing software security requirements for software developers. The AHA will continue to work with the hospital field, Congress and the Administration, and other stakeholders to advance and adopt cyber policies that are streamlined, effective and feasible to implement.” https://lnkd.in/gM2F4W7U https://lnkd.in/enEWWHh www.aha.org/cybersecurity FBI Cyber DivisionCybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency U.S. Cyber Command, U.S. Department of the Treasury, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Anne Neuberger, Jen Easterly Nitin Natarajan Bryan Vorndran Jacqueline Burgette, DMD, PhD Syed Mohiuddin David Ring #oneteamonefight #cybersecurity #ransomware #hospitals
This is obviously good news to hear if you are in cybersecurity--not good news if you are a software development company. I'm trying to understand what would be the minimum cybersecurity baseline software must achieve. I am assuming a static/dynamic source code analysis will be performed to test software and what must be the baseline of scoring the source code scan results? Will it be no Critical and High vulnerabilities, but okay to remediate Medium vulnerabilities within 60 days to minimize liability exposure? How will software development companies evaluate themselves against the legal landscape. Lastly, I think about third-party source code libraries that get used for software development. This is going to be a real challenge when your software makes calls to an external software library or using API's!
CEO of First Health Advisory - Cyber Resilient Digital Health - CHIME Board of Trustees
1yJohn - great comments on NCS and thank you for carrying the flag in Washington for so many that need support and a voice in our sector. Your work is appreciated and it is clear you are making a difference. Onward!!