When today, a year ago, a small update of software sold by the CyberSccession Firm Strike has eliminated millions of computers around the world and repeatedly sent them to the death spiral of Rabuts, the global price of all these damaged machines was equal to the worst cyberrtex in history. Some of the different styles of total losses around the world have spread well for billions of dollars.
Now a new research by a team of medical cybercular researchers has taken the cost of destruction of crowded strikes, not in dollars, but to do possible harm to hospitals and their patients all over the United States. This reveals that hundreds of services to these hospitals were affected during the closure, and raises concerns about the potentially serious effects on patients’ health and well -being.
Researchers at the University of California San Diego today celebrated a one -year anniversary of the crowded strike destruction in the Journal of the Journal of the American Medical Association of the American Medical Association, which has been trying for the first time to try to create a number of hospitals for the first time.
A chart that shows a massive increase in the closure of medical service on the day of crowded strike accidents.
Courtesy UCSD and Jama Network Open
Before this crisis, and then scanned the internet from the hospital’s networks, they found that at least 759 hospitals in the United States interfere with the network that day. They found that more than 200 of them were particularly subjected to the closure that had directly affected the patients, from inaccessible health records and test scans to the fetus monitoring system that went offline. They were able to scan 2,232 hospitals, researchers found that 34 % of them were completely interrupted.
All of this indicates that the closure of the crowded Streck can be a “major health problem”, Christian Demop, UCSD’s emergency medicine doctor and cyber -scorey researcher, and one of the authors of this article. “If we had a paper data a year ago when it had happened,” he added, “he added,” I think we were more worried about how much it really had on US health care. “
In a statement to the Wired Strike, the Wired, strongly criticized the UCSD study and Friday’s decision to publish it, in which the article was described as “Junk Science”. He noted that researchers did not confirm that interruption networks were running Windows or crowded strike software, and indicated that Microsoft’s cloud service, Ezor, suffered a major closure on the same day, which is responsible for some obstacles to the hospital’s network. “It is completely irresponsible and scientifically unforgivable, without confirming the results with any of the above mentioned hospitals,” the statement said.
The statement added, “When we reject the procedures and results of this report, we recognize the effects of the incident a year ago.” “As we have said from the beginning, we sincerely apologize to our customers and affected people and focus on strengthening our platform and industry flexibility.”


