Modernizing Data Distribution Capabilities

Modernizing Data Distribution Capabilities

Arizona-based Company Nurse has seen its share of faxes. So has everyone else in the workers’ compensation services industry. Reports and case documentation are still requested via fax or, increasingly, via email attachments.

In 2019, Henry Svendblad, Company Nurse CTO, decided the time was right to modernize the company’s data distribution capabilities, shifting from fax and email in favor of a modern APIs for the records his company managed and distributed. Along the way, he also aimed to establish Company Nurse as the undisputed leader in data privacy protection. Svendblad’s timing couldn’t have been better, and it’s an instructive tale of how an IT initiative can have a strategic business impact.

“Every customer conversation we were having included security and data privacy,” Svendblad said, “HIPAA has raised awareness and set the privacy bar for anyone handling patient information. But as it turns out, workers’ compensation isn’t regulated by HIPAA – and that’s led to some complacency in the industry. Our competitors just aren’t investing in data security.”

Svendblad envisioned a cloud-based approach to data collection that would do right by customers and position Company Nurse as the security leader at the same time.

Every company in the sector faces the risk of patient data loss. A successful breach could result in thousands of records, each containing personally identifiable information (PII), becoming public—or being used for identity theft or other cybercrimes. Beyond the direct impact on patients, breaches also raise the possibility of brand damage and costly remediation. The workers’ compensation process moves slowly so simply deleting older documents isn’t always an option – any solution would have to secure data no matter where it was stored or how it was collected.

Svendblad Got to Work
He planned to roll out the workers’ compensation industry’s first secure, cloud-based API solution for workers’ compensation injury reporting and triage while also enhancing safeguards around Company Nurse’s substantial trove of unstructured data. But applying data security policies to the faxes, reports, and documents in Company Nurse’s archives proved to be deceptively difficult. Security tools and techniques designed for databases don’t easily translate because unstructured data is hard to find and even harder to categorize, assess for risk and protect.

“We were making good progress on our cloud-based API solution, but unstructured data security was harder,” Svendblad said. “We wanted to go beyond typical folder-based access control to a true least-privileges model, where access depends on who needs it, not on where the file’s stored.”

While this would have been considered a nearly insurmountable challenge a few years ago, a new generation of data security tools, based on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) is able to take on this type of use case with relative ease. These new tools are cloud-based, which simplifies implementation and lowers ongoing operational costs.

Each NLP- and AI-driven data security tool works slightly differently. One approach that is proving effective, however, involves autonomously grouping a company’s unstructured files into thematic clusters. Through NLP and AI, the solution can understand each document’s meaning and context. At that point, the solution is able to establish a security baseline for each cluster—encompassing factors such as sharing practices, content and context, file locations, access privilege configurations, group memberships, and more. It is possible to reveal risk – and configure access – by comparing each individual file’s security factors to the cluster’s baseline.

Company Nurse chose Concentric’s Semantic Intelligence solution to proactively mitigate its unstructured data risk exposure. In a matter of days, the solution completed a deep learning process to identify security weaknesses across the entire business. “We spotted areas for improvement right away,” Svendblad said. “We found a number of old reports on an out-of-the-way server and we identified some data that was overshared within Company Nurse. These weren’t data breaches, but by deleting the reports and tightening access permissions we substantially lowered our risk exposure.”

AI and NLP don’t solve unstructured data security problems by themselves, of course. It’s a policy-driven, organizational effort. Yet, without such new technologies, it is extremely difficult to discover risks in unstructured data and cost effectively devise a remediation process. Human-developed search rules and policies take months of effort to implement and leave behind substantial long-term maintenance burdens. Enlisting end-users to tag their content – another common approach – creates ongoing training and adoption barriers that often fail to provide the needed protection. AI can now do that work – accurately, autonomously and for a fraction of the cost.

Finding the right solution and then aligning it with security policies and practices are the keys to success in this area of data security work. Done right, this approach enables competitive advantage through stronger security and better protection of data. Today Company Nurse is the acknowledged sector leader in data security, recognized in a case study earning a Cloud Computing Excellence award earlier this year. Svendblad and his secure, cloud-based API solution are, at long last, on the verge of shedding faxes and eliminating email attachments forever.

Featured

  • Maximizing Your Security Budget This Year

    Perimeter Security Standards for Multi-Site Businesses

    When you run or own a business that has multiple locations, it is important to set clear perimeter security standards. By doing this, it allows you to assess and mitigate any potential threats or risks at each site or location efficiently and effectively. Read Now

  • New Research Shows a Continuing Increase in Ransomware Victims

    GuidePoint Security recently announced the release of GuidePoint Research and Intelligence Team’s (GRIT) Q1 2024 Ransomware Report. In addition to revealing a nearly 20% year-over-year increase in the number of ransomware victims, the GRIT Q1 2024 Ransomware Report observes major shifts in the behavioral patterns of ransomware groups following law enforcement activity – including the continued targeting of previously “off-limits” organizations and industries, such as emergency hospitals. Read Now

  • OpenAI's GPT-4 Is Capable of Autonomously Exploiting Zero-Day Vulnerabilities

    According to a new study from four computer scientists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, OpenAI’s paid chatbot, GPT-4, is capable of autonomously exploiting zero-day vulnerabilities without any human assistance. Read Now

  • Getting in Someone’s Face

    There was a time, not so long ago, when the tradeshow industry must have thought COVID-19 might wipe out face-to-face meetings. It sure seemed that way about three years ago. Read Now

    • Industry Events
    • ISC West

Featured Cybersecurity

Webinars

New Products

  • ComNet CNGE6FX2TX4PoE

    The ComNet cost-efficient CNGE6FX2TX4PoE is a six-port switch that offers four Gbps TX ports that support the IEEE802.3at standard and provide up to 30 watts of PoE to PDs. It also has a dedicated FX/TX combination port as well as a single FX SFP to act as an additional port or an uplink port, giving the user additional options in managing network traffic. The CNGE6FX2TX4PoE is designed for use in unconditioned environments and typically used in perimeter surveillance. 3

  • ResponderLink

    ResponderLink

    Shooter Detection Systems (SDS), an Alarm.com company and a global leader in gunshot detection solutions, has introduced ResponderLink, a groundbreaking new 911 notification service for gunshot events. ResponderLink completes the circle from detection to 911 notification to first responder awareness, giving law enforcement enhanced situational intelligence they urgently need to save lives. Integrating SDS’s proven gunshot detection system with Noonlight’s SendPolice platform, ResponderLink is the first solution to automatically deliver real-time gunshot detection data to 911 call centers and first responders. When shots are detected, the 911 dispatching center, also known as the Public Safety Answering Point or PSAP, is contacted based on the gunfire location, enabling faster initiation of life-saving emergency protocols. 3

  • Luma x20

    Luma x20

    Snap One has announced its popular Luma x20 family of surveillance products now offers even greater security and privacy for home and business owners across the globe by giving them full control over integrators’ system access to view live and recorded video. According to Snap One Product Manager Derek Webb, the new “customer handoff” feature provides enhanced user control after initial installation, allowing the owners to have total privacy while also making it easy to reinstate integrator access when maintenance or assistance is required. This new feature is now available to all Luma x20 users globally. “The Luma x20 family of surveillance solutions provides excellent image and audio capture, and with the new customer handoff feature, it now offers absolute privacy for camera feeds and recordings,” Webb said. “With notifications and integrator access controlled through the powerful OvrC remote system management platform, it’s easy for integrators to give their clients full control of their footage and then to get temporary access from the client for any troubleshooting needs.” 3