Over a billion medical images leaked online

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Each day millions of new medical images, which contain the personal health information of patients, are uploaded to the internet but a new report from TechCrunch has revealed that over 1bn of these medical images are easily accessible online.

The reason these medical images are so easy to access is due to the fact that hundreds of hospitals, medical offices and imaging centers are running insecure storage systems. To make matters worse, anyone with an internet connection and free-to-download software can access over 1bn medical images of patients around the world.

The exposed images include X-rays, ultrasounds and CT scans and almost half of them belong to patients in the US. Security researchers have spent weeks alerting hospitals and doctors' offices to this problem, though many have ignored these warnings and continue to expose their patients' private health information online.

Back in September, the security firm Greenbone Networks discovered 24m patient exams that contained over 720m medical images online. Just two months after the firm reported its initial findings, the number of exposed servers increased by more than half to 35m patient exams that exposed 1.19bn scans online.

DICOM images

According to researchers, the problem is caused by a common weakness that exists on the servers used by hospitals, doctors' offices and radiology centers which store patient medical images.

The DICOM file format was designed to make it easier for medical practitioners to store multiple medical images in a single file and share them easily with other medical practices. These images can also be viewed using a number of free-to-use apps.

DICOM images are usually stored in a picture archiving and communications system called a PACS server that allows for easy storage and sharing. However, many doctors' offices are not following security best practices and have connected their PACS servers directly to the internet without a password to protect them.

These unprotected servers not only expose patients' medical images online but also their personal health information as many scans include cover sheets which contain patient's names, dates of birth and other sensitive information about their diagnoses. Some hospitals even use a patient's Social Security number to identify them in their systems.

Greenbone Networks recently contacted over a hundred organizations about their exposed servers. While many smaller organizations secured their systems following the security firm's advice, the 10 largest organizations, which account for one in five of all exposed medical images, did not reply at all.

Via TechCrunch

Anthony Spadafora

After working with the TechRadar Pro team for the last several years, Anthony is now the security and networking editor at Tom’s Guide where he covers everything from data breaches and ransomware gangs to the best way to cover your whole home or business with Wi-Fi. When not writing, you can find him tinkering with PCs and game consoles, managing cables and upgrading his smart home. 

Latest in Pro
A trough sensor at Overbury farm
“It's wildlife working for you” - how Agri-Tech can help revolutionize British farming as we know it
Epson EcoTank ET-4850 next to a TechRadar badge that reads Big Savings
I found the best printer deal you won't see in the Amazon Spring Sale and it's got a massive $150 saving
NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition
Nvidia's most expensive Blackwell card gets massive price cut but it is not the RTX 5090
Microsoft Copiot Studio deep reasoning and agent flows
Microsoft reveals OpenAI-powered Copilot AI agents to bosot your work research and data analysis
Group of people meeting
Inflexible work policies are pushing tech workers to quit
Data leak
Top home hardware firm data leak could see millions of customers affected
Latest in News
Buzz Lightyear Space Ranger Spin Rennovations
Disney’s giving a classic Buzz Lightyear ride a tech overhaul – here's everything you need to know
Hisense U8 series TV on wall in living room
Hisense announces 2025 mini-LED TV lineup, with screen sizes up to 100 inches – and a surprising smart TV switch
Nintendo Music teaser art
Nintendo Music expands its library with songs from Kirby and the Forgotten Land and Tetris
Opera AI Tabs
Opera's new AI feature brings order to your browser tab chaos
An image of Pro-Ject's Flatten it closed and opened
Pro-Ject’s new vinyl flattener will fix any warped LPs you inadvertently buy on Record Store Day
The iPhone 16 Pro on a grey background
iPhone 17 Pro tipped to get 8K video recording – but I want these 3 video features instead