Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota is working rapidly to shore up its cybersecurity defenses after an internal whistleblower raised alarm that the state's largest health insurer had long neglected thousands of important updates.
Internal documents show that Minnesota Blue Cross allowed 200,000 vulnerabilities classified as "critical" or "severe" to linger for years on its computer systems, despite stark warnings to executives. Software patches were available to fix most of the weak points.
The top cybersecurity executive at Minnesota Blue Cross says the insurer has been working diligently in recent weeks to bring the number of security vulnerabilities as low as possible by year's end.
"We certainly understand that our members expect us to protect their most sensitive data, and we want them to know that we are committed every single day to doing just that," Minnesota Blue Cross Chief Information Security Officer Amy Eklund said in an e-mailed statement.
Minnesota Blue Cross insures 2.8 million people, including about 1 million outside Minnesota, and brings in $6.7 billion in annual revenue. Its computer systems contain members' demographic information, medical billing codes and financial records — prized data for identity thieves and other cybercriminals.
Pam Dixon, executive director of the World Privacy Forum, a consumer-rights group, said an insurer harboring many thousands of vulnerabilities on its computers is enough to make an IT expert "break out in a cold sweat."
"The speed and the level of sophistication at which the attackers are operating today is extraordinary," Dixon said. "It is a foolish person who is running security at a large-scale organization with a lot of PHI, personal health information, without absolutely up-to-date, pristinely managed technology."
Minnesota Blue Cross has never reported a data breach of its own systems. In 2015 the personal data of 11,000 members of Minnesota's Supervalu Group Health Plan were breached after Minnesota Blue Cross stored their information on vulnerable computers owned by another Blue Cross licensee, now called Anthem Inc.