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发布时间: 2025-05-31 11:37:39北京青年报社官方账号
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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego cyber security expert Ted Harrington with Independent Security Evaluators invited us to his Downtown office to see how quickly and easily he and his colleagues demonstrate successful hacks of modern medical devices. Medical devices like pacemakers and patient monitors are some of the newest vulnerabilities to cyber attack in the healthcare industry.  The threat hits home. According to the California Life Sciences Association, the state has more medical device jobs that anywhere in the nation, with 74,000 employees. A total of 7,700 of them are based in San Diego.  San Diego is a city that's no stranger to malicious software or "malware" assaults on the medical sector. Last year, the 306-bed Alvarado Medical Center had its computer system affected by what it called a "malware disruption". The hospital briefly considered doing an on-camera interview with us about the security changes that have been implemented since the incident, but then it backed out.The hospital spokesperson cited in part, "A careless slip during an interview can reveal possible [vulnerabilities] in our 'armor' that a hacker can take advantage of." Also last year, nearby Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center made headlines when it paid a ,000 ransom to the hacker who froze its computer system for several days."Healthcare is attacked more than any other industry because that's where the money is," writes prominent cybersecurity company Sophos in its SophosLabs 2018 Malware Forecast report. A records check on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Civil Rights website shows a total of thirteen California healthcare facilities that are currently under investigation for reported hacks.  Now, the threat to patient privacy could be challenged by a threat to patient safety. Harrington and his team connected my finger to a sensor that was attached to a patient monitor. My healthy vitals were displayed on the patient monitor screen and on the screen representing a nurse's computer. In a real-world setting, that nurse's computer would be in a different room from the patient and his or her monitor. 10News Reporter Jennifer Kastner was asked to remove my finger from the sensor, to make it look like she was flat-lining, but Harrington and his team hacked the nurse's computer in seconds to make the nurse's computer show that she was still healthy.He and his team also showed us they could hack a patient's displayed blood type."If the physician thinks the patient is a certain blood type and orders a transfusion of a different blood type, that directly hurts the patient. It would most likely result in a fatality," says Harrington. In October, the FBI put out a warning about the growing concern over cyber criminals targeting unsecured "Internet of Things (IoT)" devices, including medical devices like wireless heart monitors and insulin dispensers. Years ago, it was reported that former Vice President Dick Cheney had his pacemaker altered to prevent an assassination attempt. "We can't bury our heads in the sand anymore. These types of medical cybersecurity vulnerabilities are going to become commonplace," says Dr. Christian Dameff with UC San Diego Emergency Medicine. Dameff is also a self-described hacker. Despite the FDA's claim that there aren't any known cases of patients' devices getting hacked, Dameff believes attacks have happened and they were likely accidental, but never got reported."These devices in our systems are not well equipped to even discover these types of attacks," he said. "It's essentially like asking a toaster to figure out if your house has been hacked. They're just not designed to find out."The experts we spoke to want to make it clear that while there's a threat of cyber attacks on medical devices, the likelihood of it happening to the average patient is low. They urge people to stay mindful of the risks and talk to their healthcare providers about solutions.   4453

  甘肃头、颈、胸静脉回流模型   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- San Diego Police are asking for the public’s help locating a man suspected of threatening a Target employee with a razor during a robbery.Police say the incident happened around 10 a.m. on March 25 at the Target on the 1200 block of Camino Del Rio North.According to police, a loss prevention officer noticed a man inside the store he recognized from previous encounters.Police say the man grabbed three memory cards and attempted to remove them from their cases.After removing one of the memory cards and placing it in his pocket, the man was confronted by the officer who followed him to the exit.The suspect then threatened the officer with a folding razor knife he removed from his waistband.The suspect is described as a six-foot tall 28-year-old white male wearing a tan colored long-sleeve dress shirt, blue jeans and black tennis shoes.Anyone with information is asked to call San Diego Police at 619-531-2299. 951

  甘肃头、颈、胸静脉回流模型   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and President Trump may have met in the Oval Office Tuesday, but their accounts of what was discussed differ.Faulconer visited the White House this week to discuss the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement and raise concerns over polluted water flowing in the Tijuana River Valley. Following the meeting, Faulconer confirmed the topics on Twitter, saying, "We talked about the pending #USMCA deal, California’s homeless crisis, and I also brought up sewage coming from the Tijuana River Valley – and encouraged more federal action to fix it."Though Wednesday night, the President told Fox News' Sean Hannity, another topic came up: "The wall."RELATED: Mayor Faulconer meets with President Trump to discuss issues facing San Diego“We just finished San Diego, as you know, San Diego, in California. They’re so happy. The mayor was just up in my office, great guy. He came up to thank me for having done the wall because it’s made such a difference. He said, it’s like day and night. He said people were flowing across and now nobody can come in,” Trump said.This didn't happen, Faulconer's director of communications, Craig Gustafson, says.“That’s not what Mayor Faulconer said. We all know that the President uses his own terminology. But that wasn’t the focus of their conversation," Gustafson said. "The President as an aside asked Mayor Faulconer what he thought about the border, and the Mayor’s response is that we welcome federal investment in our land ports of entry. We're the busiest border crossing in the Western Hemisphere, and federal dollars help us make it easier to trade, cross legally and commute across the border."RELATED: Official: ICE to begin immigration raids in 10 cities on June 23Gustafson continued, "Mayor Faulconer said to the President that the border does not define San Diego's relationship with Mexico. Trade does, and that’s why he’s so focused on getting the USMCA trade agreement approved by Congress. Mayor Faulconer doesn’t support a wall from sea to shining sea. Let’s invest instead on stopping sewage from the Tijuana River Valley.”The mayor's press secretary, Ashley Bailey, told City News Service Tuesday that immigration was not discussed between the two. Faulconer was originally scheduled to meet with the White House Intergovernmental Affairs Team, before Trump heard Faulconer was in Washington and invited him to meet.Sections of old border wall have been replaced along San Diego's border recently, including a 14-mile stretch of newly constructed primary and secondary border wall just east of Otay Mesa. 2614

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - San Diego Police are investigating the discovery of a man's body in the water off Mission Beach.Lifeguards discovered the body about two and a half miles off the shoreline about 11 a.m., officials said. They had been drawn to the area by a fisherman who saw a flock of seagulls in the water and went to investigate.When they found the body, the man was only wearing only board shorts and was found with a chain around his waist.San Diego Police Homicide Lt. Anthony Dupree described the chain as a "half-inch linked chain. It almost looks like someone may wear it as a belt."Lt. Dupree also said there were no obvious signs of trauma or evidence that the body had been weighed down with anything, but the chain was concerning.The man's identity was not immediately released. Police said he was white, possibly in his 30s or 40s.10News is monitoring breaking developments in this story. 942

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Residents wanting to take a hot shower at a La Jolla apartment complex could have to wait several days while crews work to repair a gas leak. The leak shut off hot water to three apartment buildings. Neighbors say they got a series of emails Saturday, one of them saying they wouldn’t have hot water for five to seven days. Residents say the issue is unacceptable. "I'm not getting in there, it's way too cold,” said Nick Imison. An email from his leasing company informed Imison he would be without hot water for about a week. Imison lives in the Regents La Jolla apartment complex. The email went on to say that their gas supply was shut off after crews found a gas leak. In the email, residents were told that if they need a shower during business hours, they need to stop by the office with an ID. “I was completely unacceptable for a complex that has about 600 units to just go hey yea you can come shower bring your id but it's only between the hours of nine and six,” Imison said. 10News reached out to the leasing company via email but have not heard back. In the email sent to residents, the company cites the need for several city and SDG&E required inspections before they can turn the gas back on. 1242

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