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My health insurance company is sending passwords in plaintext, what todo?

11 点作者 mangoTangoBango大约 3 年前
I got this message: Username: someUserName Password: somePassword Sorry for the long wait on this. Thank you!<p>This is from a plan that I bought off the Federal Exchange.

8 条评论

twunde大约 3 年前
Strictly speaking, having passwords in plaintext is legal but not secure since the HIPAA Security Rule is about protecting PHI. It&#x27;s also possible that the passwords in their system aren&#x27;t in plaintext, but customer service has to change the password and they need some way to send you the password. It sucks.<p>So how do get the company to change this? Your best bet is to contact the executive(s) in charge of compliance and security about this (you&#x27;ll likely need to do some Googling and&#x2F;or LinkedIn stalking).<p>The argument that you want to present to them is that the HIPAA Security Rule requires that a covered entity `Identify and protect against reasonably anticipated threats to the security or integrity of the information` and that in this day and age having passwords in plain text is a reasonably anticipated threat.<p>Reference: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.hhs.gov&#x2F;hipaa&#x2F;for-professionals&#x2F;security&#x2F;laws-regulations&#x2F;index.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.hhs.gov&#x2F;hipaa&#x2F;for-professionals&#x2F;security&#x2F;laws-re...</a>
pedalpete大约 3 年前
First off I&#x27;d go into my health insurance portal and change my password. Then use the forgot password, and see if they are still mailing your password in plain text. Do a bit of investigation to confirm that all passwords are still stored in plain text.<p>Once you can confirm that your password is sent in plain text, I&#x27;d contact the insurer to make sure they are aware of the security implications.<p>If you&#x27;ve read Troy Hunt at all, take a book out of his practice. They probably won&#x27;t make any change, or understand, but you&#x27;ve tried to help.<p>Then, change insurance companies if you fear your data is at risk, which it probably is.
blackclub2大约 3 年前
Seems like we neeed more context? If you simply forget your password often, you can utilize password managers like LastPass or C2 Password to help to memorize credentials
hedora大约 3 年前
If it&#x27;s a new account, no big deal. Just reset the password. If someone MITMed the email, and hijacked the account, then call customer service.<p>Otherwise, no harm, no foul?<p>(Hopefully it will force a reset on first login, and reject the emailed password...)
willcipriano大约 3 年前
Needs more context, that sounds like a human sent that email. Did you request something out of the ordinary to cause a human to be involved in account sign up? When you login, are you promoted to change the password?
armendhammer大约 3 年前
Could the FCC get involved in this or would that be the wrong agency to contact?
jazzyjackson大约 3 年前
Unless your credit card info is also plaintext, I don&#x27;t think it is a law or anything, no?<p>And this is a password you set? old systems would email you a new password to log in &amp; change it, vs a one time use link nowadays.
bin_bash大约 3 年前
just don&#x27;t use that password anywhere else