Kaiser Permanente shared 13.4M people's data with Microsoft Bing, Google, others

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Kaiser Permanente shared 13.4M people's data with Microsoft Bing, Google, others
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Millions of Kaiser Permanente patients' data was likely shared with Google, Microsoft Bing, X/Twitter, and other third-parties, according to the American healthcare giant.it has started notifying 13.

Millions of Kaiser Permanente patients' data was likely shared with Google, Microsoft Bing, X/Twitter, and other third-parties, according to the American healthcare giant.it has started notifying 13.4 million current and former members and patients that"certain online technologies, previously installed on its websites and mobile applications, may have transmitted personal information to third-party vendors," when customers used its websites and mobile applications.

Kaiser has since removed that tech from its websites and apps, and said it is not aware of"any misuse of any member's or patient's personal information."tools, offered by Big Tech and data brokers, on its websites and apps, and only realizing now what information exactly was being transmitted by that code when people visited and used those sites and applications.for allowing this kind of thing to happen, especially when it involves health-related data.

Kaiser emphasized no usernames, passwords, Social Security numbers, financial account information, or credit card numbers were shared with the third parties. So while super sensitive information wasn't leaked, having health knowledge base search terms and site usage handed over isn't terribly great. "Kaiser Permanente conducted a voluntary internal investigation into the use of these online technologies, and subsequently removed them from the websites and mobile applications," the Oakland, California-based consortium said in its statement."In addition, Kaiser Permanente has implemented additional measures with the guidance of experts designed to safeguard against recurrence of this type of incident.

Plus, not all of the websites had a privacy policy. Of the 71 percent that did, 56 percent disclosed specific third-party companies that could receive user information. ®Getting on board with AI36

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