Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy Security IT

UnitedHealth Hid Its Change Healthcare Data Breach Notice For Months (techcrunch.com) 18

Change Healthcare has hidden its data breach notification webpage from search engines using "noindex" code, TechCrunch found, making it difficult for affected individuals to find information about the massive healthcare data breach that compromised over 100 million people's medical records last year.

The UnitedHealth subsidiary said Tuesday it had "substantially" completed notifying victims of the February 2024 ransomware attack. The cyberattack caused months of healthcare disruptions and marked the largest known U.S. medical data theft.

UnitedHealth Hid Its Change Healthcare Data Breach Notice For Months

Comments Filter:
  • Free Luigi (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Enough said.

  • by Pseudonymous Powers ( 4097097 ) on Wednesday January 15, 2025 @03:52PM (#65091855)
    This will change nothing. If there were real competition in this sector, nobody would be using UHC in the first place.
    • by davidwr ( 791652 )

      If there were real competition in this sector, nobody would be using UHC in the first place.

      If there was real competition in this sector, at least one vendor (let's use the fictional company "Change2 Nohealthcare," owned by "UnitedMoneyGrab") would go after the "hey employers, do you need to at least pretend to offer health insurance for your employees but you don't want to spend much on it, have I got a deal for you" segment of the market.

      • My sentiments exactly. They might as well be banks the way they extract money from the public.

      • by Sique ( 173459 )
        If I get your sentiment, then you are saying, that part of the problem is the companies choosing the health insurance plan for their employees as part of the payment package?
        • by davidwr ( 791652 )

          Some employers only offer 1 or a few health insurance plans. Since companies typically pay for part of the health care costs of employees, they have some incentive to "go cheap."

          If the employer offers employees meaningful choices, the employer may subsidize all plans by the same dollar amount. This tends to make the cheapest plans the only affordable ones for employees who are barely scraping by.

          Either way, employees are incentivized to "go cheap."

          Of course this becomes "penny-wise, pound-foolish" when yo

        • Employer-provided health insurance is a "temporary measure" lasting from 1946-1947 to work around Truman's wage cap program to get the GI's back into the workforce.

          That's what they told us.

          What, your employer doesn't offer home insurance and car insurance too? Monsters.

          The truth is having captive employees is good for everybody but the people who need healthcare.

          ACA was a total scam that fooled a lot of people.

          But most people would rather be fooled than admit they were fooled.

  • You know, some of these folks might need protective custody. Put them under guard, somewhere safe where access is strictly limited and their well-being can be assured 24/7. Wouldn't want to risk the murder of another United Healthcare higher-up...

    Come to think of it, let's similarly protect a few dozen more c-levels in other unpopular high-profile corporations. For their own good, of course!

No man is an island if he's on at least one mailing list.

Working...