HITRUST aims to help users get ready for compliance with a wide variety of security rule sets at once. It's not cheap, but it could save a lot of time and effort.
HITRUST is a cybersecurity framework that seeks to unify the rules for many other existing regulatory and industry frameworks, including HIPAA, GDPR, PCI-DSS, and more.
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The law governing Internet of Things (IoT) devices in the United States (US) is rapidly evolving. From industry specific guidelines for connected medical devices and autonomous vehicles, to more general standards such as the Internet of Things Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2020 (Federal IoT Law), state and federal level laws are quickly changing as it relates to IoT standards, introducing new challenges for emerging technologies and new use cases for manufacturers.
Much like other areas of the law, California has been a leader in developing standards around IoT devices. In 2017, California became the first state to adopt an IoT specific cybersecurity law known as the California Internet of Things Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2017 (California IoT Law). Codified at California Civil Code § 1798.91.04, the California IoT Act took effect on January 1, 2020 and requires manufacturers of IoT devices to equip any IoT devi
Viewpoint: The Future of Commercial Insurance Is Connected Insight By Chris Koverman | April 1, 2021
Artificial intelligence adoption across the insurance industry is taking off. In its report, “The Dawn of the Age of AI in Insurance,” Genpact noted that insurers recognize the value and potential of AI, “with 87% of carriers investing more than $5 million in AI-related technologies each year. This is more than both banking (86%) and consumer goods and retail companies (63%).”
Genpact’s researchers also projected that AI would make a fundamental impact on the insurance industry in the coming years. Signaling this prediction will hold, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ Innovation and Technology Task Force formed a working group devoted to AI, which drafted the recently adopted “Principles on Artificial Intelligence (AI)” to help guide third parties, regulators and NAIC committees looking into AI in insurance.
A nurse tends to a COVID-19 patient. (US Navy Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sara Eshleman, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)
In a newly published strategic analysis report, the CyberPeace Institute this week conveyed the exacting toll that cyberattacks are taking on the health care industry, especially the human impact on health care staffers, patients and society.
In response, the non-profit has offered a glimpse into its work-in-progress âAccountability Framework,â designed to help relevant health care stakeholders take responsibility for keeping cyberspace secure by enforcing behavioral norms and also by understanding and rooting out the underlying causes when attacks do happen.