The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health is teaming up with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to fight cybercrime. The two agencies are working together on the Artificial Intelligence Cyber Challenge, a two-year competition for AI and cybersecurity experts to design AI tools to identify and fix software vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure like transportation, emergency services, energy sources and water and wastewater systems. To help ensure the contest addresses vulnerable health care software, including medical devices, hospital IT and biotech equipment, ARPA-H will commit $20 million toward the challenge. “In the wake of recent cyberattacks targeting our nation’s digital health infrastructure, there is increased urgency to develop straightforward and dependable solutions to protect patients’ data and access to care,” ARPA-H Director Renee Wegrzyn said in a statement. “Off-the-shelf software tools aren’t cutting it.” Why it matters: Health care cyberattacks, especially ransomware and hacking, have surged in recent years, according to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights. The OCR reports a 256 percent increase in reports of large breaches involving hacking and a 264 percent increase in ransomware over the past five years. Last year, hacking made up 79 percent of large breach reports, and in 2023, large breaches affected 134 million people. Zoom out: A cyberattack last month at Change Healthcare, among the largest U.S. clearinghouses for medical payments, highlights how easily attacks on health care systems can hurt providers, pharmacies and patients. Health care companies might be especially vulnerable to cyberattacks because they’ve historically invested less in cybersecurity than other sectors, like finance, POLITICO’s Kelly Hooper and Robert King report. When cybercriminals identify an industry weakness, they are relentless — and strike until companies fix the problem. What's next:Registration for the competition is open through April 30.
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