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In the aftermath of the Heartbleed Bug‘s discovery, the security flaw continues to spark security concerns.
The Heartbleed Bug was revealed in many of the world’s most popular sites in April, and Internet users were shocked at its scope. From retail sites to social networks, it seemed as though no Internet giant was immune to the problems of the Heartbleed Bug, which affects site encryption and security technology Secure Sockets Layer (SSL).
Companies urged users to change their passwords, saying the vulnerability may compromise personal and financial information.
Those continued fears about the Heartbleed Bug were realized after a hospital group notified 4.5 million patients about a data breach after cybercriminals from China stole their personal information. New details have emerged that show evidence that the attackers managed to use the Heartbleed Bug to perpetuate the breach at Community Health Systems, according to a blog post by IT security firm TrustedSec.
The firm said the attackers were able to access user credentials because of the Heartbleed Bug and then logged into the internal computer network that contained millions of patient records.
The Community Health data breach was the biggest incident in which cyberattackers exploited the Heartbleed Bug, according to Reuters.
In light of the massive breach, TrustSec advised organizations to monitor and detect threats to its security and response rapidly before data breaches occur.
“Having the ability to detect and respond to an attack when it happens is key to enacting incident response and mitigating the threat quickly,” the IT security firm said in a blog post. “What we can learn here is that when something as large as Heartbleed occurs (rare) that we need to focus on addressing the security concerns immediately and without delay.”
In response to the Heartbleed Bug and the cyberthreats posed by this vulnerability, IT security professionals and tech firms are banding together to support OpenSSL software and make this technology more secure, The Wall Street Journal reported. The industrywide effort has led to the creation of the Core Infrastructure Initiative, which is already backed by Google and IBM, to develop the source code that will protect websites from vulnerabilities like the Heartbleed Bug.
If you’re worried about your information becoming compromised and the identity theft aftermath, it’s important to monitor your financial accounts regularly for signs of fraud. Also, you can monitor your credit scores for free every month on Credit.com. Any large, unexpected change in your credit scores could signal identity theft and you should pull your credit reports (which you can do for free once a year) to confirm.
Image: iStock
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