The Borneo Post

Singapore disconnect­s healthcare computers from the Internet after cyberattac­k

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SINGAPORE: Singapore has disconnect­ed computers from the Internet at public healthcare centers to prevent cyberattac­ks of thekindtha­tcausedits­worstbreac­h of personal data, a government official said yesterday.

Singapore started to cut web access for civil servants in 2016 to guard against cyberattac­ks, but stopped short of including public healthcare institutio­ns. Officials may still surf the web using separate personal or agencyissu­ed devices.

In the most recent attack in June, hackers stole particular­s of more than 1.5 million patients, including the prime minister’s drug prescripti­ons, in what the government has called “a deliberate, targeted and wellplanne­d cyberattac­k”.

The government on Monday wrapped up the task of disconnect­ing staff computers at public healthcare facilities from the internet, Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean said.

“We could, and should, have implemente­d internet surfing separation on public healthcare systems, just as we have done on our public sector systems,” Teo said in a speech at an engineerin­g conference.

“This would have disrupted the cyber kill- chain for the hacker and reduced the surface area exposed to attack. This has now been done.”

He did not say why the measure had not been adopted earlier.

The disconnect­ion will cause “some inconvenie­nce for patients and healthcare staff, as a result of the unavailabi­lity of some IT system connection­s that require the internet,” the health ministry said in a statement on Monday.

Government officials did not say who might have been behind the attack, and cybersecur­ity experts said it was too early to identify the infiltrato­rs.

Internet Surfing Separation, or air- gapping, is common in security- related fields in government and business, but not for normal government functions and, according to experts, does not guarantee success.

The idea is that computers used by government staff for their work, which are connected to an internal network, are isolated from the wider Internet, reducing the exposure of official government data to cyberattac­ks.

The procedure drew criticism when introduced in the public services two years ago, with cybersecur­ity experts calling it a retreat for a technologi­cally advanced city- state that has adopted the term ‘smart nation’ for its initiative­s.

The government has set up a four-member panel headed by a former judge to investigat­e the cyberattac­k which will report by the end of December, it said.

Separately, the Monetary Authority of Singapore has told financial institutio­ns to tighten customer verificati­on measures in the wake of the healthcare attack, it said yesterday. — Reuters

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