mgm cyberattack

Medicare Data Breach Exposes Nearly 1 Million: The Hidden Dangers of Poor Cybersecurity

EDITOR'S NOTES

Nearly one million Medicare beneficiaries are now at risk after their personal information was exposed in a massive data breach. Names, Social Security numbers, and medical details were compromised, highlighting a harsh reality: most institutions are woefully unprepared to protect sensitive data. This breach is just one of many that exposes the weak cybersecurity practices behind essential services. The move to online data storage has made personal information vulnerable, and many organizations are still failing to keep up with the growing threats. If you think your data is safe, think again. Important warning for Medicare beneficiaries: nearly 1 million people may have had their personal information compromised in a cybersecurity incident. Find out more.

Nearly 1 million Medicare beneficiaries are being warned that their personal information may have been compromised in a cybersecurity incident last year.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation (WPS), the contractor that utilized the affected MOVEit software, said last week that 946,801 people on Medicare were notified that they may have had "protected health information or other personally identifiable information" compromised.

Names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, mailing addresses, Medicare Beneficiary Identifiers and certain other personal information may have been exposed, according to CMS.

The federal agency said files with personal information were "compromised" between May 27 and 31 of last year during a cybersecurity incident involving the Progress Software-developed MOVEit file transfer system that WPS utilized.

WPS learned bad actors "copied files from WPS’s MOVEit file transfer system" during another review that occurred this summer related to the 2023 incident, CMS said.

"CMS and WPS are not aware of any reports of identity fraud or improper use of your Personal Information as a direct result of this incident, however, we are taking this opportunity to notify you so that, if you wish to do so, you can take advantage of the information and resources referenced in this notice," they said in a sample of the letter.

In the letter, CMS said beneficiaries' Medicare coverage was "not affected as a result of this incident." Still, it is providing them with a new Medicare number and card.

Those who were potentially affected will receive free access to Experian credit monitoring for 12 months as part of CMS’ response to the incident.

"We take the privacy and security of your Medicare information very seriously," the CMS letter said. "CMS and WPS apologize for the inconvenience this incident might have caused you."

The MOVEit software developer resolved the issue with a software patch.

A total of 67.4 million people have some form of Medicare.

This article originally appeared on Fox Business.

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