The Dangers of Unencrypted Email

Postcards from War: Recently, I was reading some of my grandfather’s faded postcards from World War I. I happened to read one in which he mentioned being released from quarantine: March 11, 1918, Fort Lewis, Washington – the Spanish Flu pandemic.

Then & Now: Postcards were how our grandparents sent brief messages over long distances. They are the antique analogs to modern email. The messages and attachments you send via email are every bit as private and secure as that dusty, old postcard.

Is This Normal: Recently, a close associate of mine, I’ll call him “John”, was required to take a defensive driving course. The business providing the service asked John to send a copy of his driver’s license. John promptly took a picture of his driver’s license in beautiful, high-definition color and attached it to an unsecure email. He didn’t even question it.

How It Works: Let’s look momentarily at a seemingly benign example to illustrate what happens when you hastily click the “send” button. Say you work for a medical practice and you send an email from your office to a patient. Here’s what happens:

  1. The email leaves your computer.
  2. It travels on your Internet Service Provider’s (ISP) network.
  3. It arrives at your mail server – a server you probably don’t control.
  4. Your hosted email provider then forwards a copy of the email to the patient’s mail server, probably webmail, like Gmail.
  5. A copy of the email languishes on the mail provider’s server.
  6. It then takes the last leg of the journey to land on the patient’s personal computer.

Everybody Sees It: As you can see, at any of those points, the email (like a postcard) can be read by anyone with access. That means, if any of those computers storing a copy of the emails is compromised, so are the emails. All of them.

Unsecure By Design: Email is by design, unsecure. That is why you should never, (let me repeat, EVER) include any important, private information in any email, not just the protected health information (PHI) of patients. Unencrypted email is simply the wrong medium for transmitting sensitive data.

From the hhs.gov website:

Patients may initiate communications with a provider using e-mail. If this situation occurs, the health care provider can assume (unless the patient has explicitly stated otherwise) that e-mail communications are acceptable to the individual.

For Healthcare: Now, I’m not a HIPAA lawyer, and this is not legal advice, but basically, if you are a medical practice, you know that much of your communication with patients is over email. In fact, many prefer it. So as long as you warn the patient that your email communication is over unsecure media, and the patient acknowledges, then you may be absolved of the consequences of a PHI breach … maybe. You can even get patient acknowledgment with (ironically) a simple email waiver form that the patient signs and returns to your office, over email.

Secure Options: If you only send PHI through your Electronic Medical Record’s application, it may take care of the encryption for you. But if not, there are email providers that will encrypt your emails. If you use Microsoft Office 365, there is a tier that will allow you to encrypt email. Other email providers like ProtonMail offer encryption capabilities. A Chrome extension even exists allowing you to encrypt Gmail. It can be a little inconvenient because you have to think up a strong password for each email, then you have to deliver the password to your patient by calling or texting them. If emails containing sensitive data are sent infrequently, the risk is lower. You decide whether you’d rather go through the effort or experience a breach.

You don’t have to protect sensitive data forever. Its value degrades over time. Conversely, that little postcard my grandfather hastily scrawled over 100 years ago is ever more precious to me. 

Passwords Are Like Dental Floss

Flossing is Hard: Passwords are the dental floss of the internet. They take precious time to use, everyone hates them, they cause mild discomfort, and the consequence of negligence could spell doom. Not immediate doom. But eventual in inevitable doom. Oh and by the way, China knows your password! Your favorite one. The really complex one you made up 6 years ago that combines your sister’s phone number, your son’s birthday, and the exclamation point at the end. They also know your other favorite one. “Sweetie”.

Password Strength: Last week I gave you a tripwire you could use to foil a ransomware attacker with a strong password.  Continuing the theme, this week we discuss the importance of password hygiene.  Password hygiene involves the strength, uniqueness, and practices of passwords.

The Longer the Better: Compare password hygiene to dental floss hygiene – make them long, change frequently, and don’t share. When it comes to length, longer = stronger. In fact, length is more important than complexity.  So instead of using a complex array of gibberish letters, numbers and symbols, the best practice is to create a passphrase.  A passphrase is a list of unrelated common words. It is easier to for you to remember and harder for a computer to crack. In this example from www.xkcd.com/936/ , the password Tr0ub4dor&3 is difficult to remember but can be cracked in 3 days.  However, if we tie four common unrelated words together like “correct horse battery staple”, it would take 550 years to crack.

Don’t Re-use Your Floss: You may question, “If I create one strong passphrase, I could use it for all my accounts and I’ll be safe?” Well, not exactly.  That’s where the second part of “treat-passwords-like-dental-floss” comes in. Don’t share. Today, you have so many accounts with passwords to remember.  You have your email, company login, bank, investment, social media, gaming … the list goes on.  Major breaches like LinkedIn and DropBox have exposed your username (typically your email address) and password.  The information from these breaches eventually ends up on the Dark Web available for any cyber-criminal to peruse. To see if your email address is on the Dark Web, you can check it at www.haveibeenpwned.com.   A trusted advisor can offer Dark Web checks for your business domains. 

Try It Everywhere: When the hacker acquires your credentials, they will test them against popular websites hoping you reused the password. Maybe you have a Wells Fargo, or Merrill Lynch account with the same username and password. If they succeed, the consequences could be disastrous.

Password Managers: You may want to reconsider letting your browser manage your passwords. The saved password feature of browsers is great for ease of use for you – and a cyber-criminal.  These passwords are stored in clear text in the browser can easily be stolen.  

Consider the Consequences: Since there are so many long passwords to remember, using a Password Manager can ease your password woes.  A Password Manager can create, encrypt, store, and autofill your passwords for multiple accounts and make it harder for hackers to get them.  Password managers can also protect you from Some recommend free managers are:  Apple Key Chain,  Bitwarden and KeePass.  You may hate to floss. You may hate password hygiene. But until there is something better, consider the consequences.