Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning , Governance & Risk Management , Government

ISMG Editors: US Election Impact on Cybersecurity, HIPAA

Also: Potential Government Policy Changes; AI-Driven Zero-Day Discoveries
Clockwise, from top left: Anna Delaney, Tony Morbin, Marianne Kolbasuk McGee and Mathew Schwartz

In the latest weekly update, ISMG editors discussed how the recent election results may reshape U.S. cybersecurity policy and healthcare privacy under HIPAA and the groundbreaking role of artificial intelligence in Google’s recent discovery of a critical zero-day vulnerability.

See Also: How Overreliance on EDR is Failing Healthcare Providers

The panelists - Anna Delaney, director, productions; Tony Morbin, executive news editor, EU; Marianne Kolbasuk McGee, executive editor, HealthcareInfoSecurity; and Mathew Schwartz, executive editor of DataBreachToday and Europe - discussed:

  • Cybersecurity challenges the new Trump administration might face and how it must navigate an increasingly complex world amid heightened geopolitical tensions;
  • What Trump’s return to the White House might mean for the healthcare sector, particularly in terms of his administration's regulatory enforcement priorities, as well as potential changes to HIPAA regulations and enforcement;
  • How Google's AI agent, Big Sleep, uncovered a critical zero-day vulnerability in SQLite and implications for the evolving role of human researchers in cybersecurity.

The ISMG Editors' Panel runs weekly. Don't miss our previous installments, including the Oct. 25 edition on 2024 election security, tackling global threats and the Nov. 1 edition on law enforcement’s ransomware crackdown.


About the Author

Anna Delaney

Anna Delaney

Director, Productions, ISMG

An experienced broadcast journalist, Delaney conducts interviews with senior cybersecurity leaders around the world. Previously, she was editor-in-chief of the website for The European Information Security Summit, or TEISS. Earlier, she worked at Levant TV and Resonance FM and served as a researcher at the BBC and ITV in their documentary and factual TV departments.




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