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Stryker Hit by Major Cyberattack as Hacktivist Group Claims Wiper Malware Operation

 

A major cybersecurity breach hit Stryker, the international medical tech company, throwing operations into disarray across continents. Claiming responsibility is a hacktivist faction supportive of Palestine, said to have ties to Iranian networks. Outages spread quickly through digital infrastructure after the intrusion became active. Emergency protocols were activated by staff as normal workflows collapsed without warning. 

Following the incident, blame was placed on Handala - a collective that openly admitted initiating a cyberattack involving destructive software aimed at Stryker’s infrastructure. Data removal affected numerous devices throughout the organization's environment. From those systems, about 50 terabytes containing confidential material were copied before transmission outside secure boundaries. 

Even though confirmation remains absent, whispers among workers stretch from Dublin to San Jose, pointing at chaos. Over two hundred thousand gadgets - servers mostly, but also handheld units - supposedly vanished under digital assault, according to Handala. Operations froze in clusters of buildings scattered through nearly thirty nations. Evidence trickles in from office staff in Perth, San José, Cork, and beyond, painting a fractured picture of stalled systems. 

One moment staff noticed work phones wiped without warning. Then came reports of private gadgets - once linked to office networks - suddenly cleared too. Afterward, guidance arrived: uninstall every business-related app. Tools meant to manage phones, along with messaging software tied to the organization, had to go. Removal became expected across all equipment. Work slowed in certain areas when digital tools went offline, pushing staff toward handwritten logs instead. With networks down, employees handled tasks by hand until technology recovered. 

A breach within Stryker’s Microsoft-based network led to widespread IT outages worldwide, as disclosed in a regulatory document. Right after spotting the problem, the firm triggered its internal cyber crisis protocol. Outside specialists joined the effort soon afterward - helping examine and limit further damage. Even though the disturbance was serious, Stryker said it found no signs of ransomware and thinks the situation is now under control. Still, the company admitted work continues to restore systems, without saying when operations will return fully. 

Yet completion remains uncertain despite progress so far. Emerging in late 2023, Handala already shows patterns of focusing on Israeli entities - using tactics that pair information exfiltration with damaging software meant to erase digital traces. Public exposure of obtained files forms a consistent part of their method, typically done via web-based disclosure channels. Though relatively new, its actions follow a clear playbook centered around visibility and disruption. 

Amid rising global tensions, a fresh assault emerges - tied to surging digital threats fueled by ongoing regional disputes. Noted specialists stress these events reveal a shift: large-scale interference now walks hand-in-hand with widespread information theft. While conflict zones heat up offline, their shadows stretch deep into network spaces. With Stryker rebuilding its digital infrastructure, the event highlights how sophisticated cyberattacks increasingly endanger vital sectors - healthcare and medtech among them - where uninterrupted function matters most.

Ransomware Attack Hits South Africa’s Land Bank, Hackers Demand Bitcoin Payment

 



South Africa’s Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana has disclosed that the Land and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa was targeted in a ransomware incident earlier this year.

The cyberattack took place on January 12, according to official confirmation.

Details of the breach were made public through a parliamentary response after Adil Nchabeleng requested clarification on how the incident occurred, which systems were impacted, and whether the attackers issued any ransom demands.

In his response, the Minister stated that the attackers demanded 5 Bitcoin, estimated to be worth around R5.4 million. The bank chose not to comply with this demand. He further confirmed that core banking infrastructure and data related to farmers were not accessed or compromised.

Initial investigations revealed that suspicious activity was detected within certain parts of the bank’s IT environment. Further analysis suggested that an external party gained entry by exploiting a vulnerability in an internet-facing server. Following this, ransomware was deployed, leading to encryption of portions of the bank’s server systems as well as several employee laptops.

The attack specifically affected servers operating within virtual environments that run on Microsoft systems. Authorities have identified the perpetrators as part of a Ransomware-as-a-Service group, indicating the use of commercially distributed ransomware tools.

In response to the breach, the bank acted swiftly to contain the damage. Affected systems were isolated, indicators of compromise were removed, and additional security measures were implemented to strengthen defenses.

Officials emphasized that critical platforms, including enterprise resource planning systems, core banking infrastructure, and customer relationship management tools, were not accessed. This was attributed to the fact that the SAP environment is maintained separately from other server systems, providing an additional layer of protection.

However, other parts of the IT environment were significantly impacted. Systems outside the SAP infrastructure were either encrypted or rendered inaccessible to staff, and multiple laptops were also locked by the ransomware.

The attackers reportedly demanded payment in Bitcoin in exchange for restoring access to data and refraining from releasing any stolen information. Despite this, the bank confirmed that it did not make any ransom payment.

During the recovery phase, the bank continued to isolate affected environments, remove malicious traces, and enhance its cybersecurity posture. This included strengthening firewall configurations, patching known vulnerabilities, and improving detection mechanisms to better respond to future threats.

This incident follows a series of cyberattacks affecting organizations in South Africa. In May of the previous year, South African Airways experienced a major cyber disruption that affected its website, mobile application, and several internal systems. Immediate steps were taken at the time to reduce the impact on flight operations and customer services.

The Land Bank attack sheds light on the increasing frequency of ransomware incidents targeting key institutions. It also underscores the importance of proactive cybersecurity measures, including system segmentation, timely updates, and continuous monitoring to prevent and mitigate such threats.

Large Scale Data Breach at Conduent Hits 25 Million Users Nationwide


 

A central component of public service delivery, Conduent is entrusted with the invisible yet indispensable machinery that keeps the system running from healthcare eligibility systems to benefits administration, and occupies a unique position at the intersection of government operations and private data stewardship. This centrality, however, is the subject of recent scrutiny.

Several months ago, from October 2024 to January 2025, a covert intrusion occurred within the organization's network, resulting in the exfiltration of at least 25 million individuals' personal data. It was not simply routine identifiers exposed in the breach; it also compromised information related to Medicaid and SNAP programs as well as Social Security numbers. 

Modern digital infrastructure faces a sobering reality in light of the incident: the fallout of compromised organizations that are responsible for managing critical public services extends far beyond corporate boundaries, putting millions of individuals at risk for years to come. In the subsequent disclosures, it has been established that the scope of the compromise has been clarified, suggesting a much greater impact than was initially anticipated. 

Approximately 25 million individuals in the United States were affected by the breach, according to a February update provided by the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection, thereby cementing the incident's ranking as one of the most consequential data breaches in recent history.

There appears to have been sustained access to internal systems during the period late 2024 to early 2025, as determined by forensic assessments. There are multiple layers of personally identifiable and regulatory information that have been exfiltrated during this period, including full names, social security numbers, insurance records, and sensitive medical information. 

Observing the nature and composition of the compromised information, it appears that the attackers were not merely opportunistic, but also understood the value embedded within aggregated service provider environments, where administrative, healthcare, and benefits data are converged to create highly lucrative targets. In light of Conduent's operational footprint, it becomes more apparent that the incident has scale and systemic implications. 

By 2019, the company reported serving over 100 million people across the United States with its services, while maintaining relationships with the majority of Fortune 100 companies and hundreds of government agencies. Considering that public-sector programs and private enterprise workflows are integrated in such an extensive way, one may understand why the affected population appears to be fragmented and unrelated.

As part of Conduent's administrative processes, the company processes state-run benefit programs, such as Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, across a multitude of states, as well as document handling, payment processing, and claims support for healthcare providers and insurers, including Blue Cross Blue Shield networks. 

A significant portion of the Volvo Group's workforce is exposed to this virus through its corporate services division, which also involves large-scale workforce management. This virus has also been confirmed to affect employees connected with major industrial organizations, including several segments of the Volvo Group workforce. There is a strong correlation between the intrusion and the SafePay ransomware group, which publicly claimed responsibility following the breach, suggesting a financially motivated operation with an emphasis on data exfiltration and extortion. 

As a result of the compromised dataset, this incident exceeds the traditional narrative of ransomware. In regulatory disclosures and notification communications, it is reported that the exfiltrated information consists of a dense accumulation of personally identifiable and protected health information, including full legal names, residence information, date of birth, Social Security numbers, and detailed insurance and medical records. 

Since Conduent serves as an intermediary processor, many of those affected may not have been directly connected with the company, which highlights an opacity in third-party data ecosystems, which routinely transmit sensitive information to vendor-controlled environments without the knowledge of end users due to the company's role as an intermediary processor. As a result of its expanding scope, as well as its long-term risk profile associated with the data exposed, this breach is distinguishable from previous disclosures. 

An initial estimate of approximately 10 million affected individuals has since more than doubled, illustrating the delay in visibility often associated with third-party compromises as downstream entities gradually become aware of their vulnerabilities.

In addition, by including immutable identifiers such as Social Security numbers with medical and insurance data, the introduction of long-term vectors for identity fraud, medical exploitation, and precision-targeted social engineering campaigns is greatly enhanced. 

The incident highlights a persistent blind spot in organizational security strategies: breaches originated within vendor infrastructure often go unnoticed by the organizations that rely on them, thereby making it difficult for them to respond appropriately and to hold vendors accountable. Hence, the appearance of breach notifications from an unfamiliar service provider does not represent an anomalous occurrence, but rather indicates the degree to which modern data processing ecosystems are becoming increasingly interconnected and vulnerable. 

A series of remedial measures have been implemented by Conduent following the disclosure in order to mitigate downstream risk for affected individuals, including providing free identity monitoring services to consumers and setting up dedicated support channels. Several state-level advisories, including those issued by the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade, and Consumer Protection, indicate that call center infrastructure has been activated to assist affected residents. 

However, officials and cybersecurity experts have emphasized that large-scale breach notifications frequently attract opportunistic fraud campaigns, in which attackers attempt to exploit public awareness by using phishing and impersonation techniques. People are advised to independently verify enrollment links and communication channels-preferably via state notices or hotlines-before providing sensitive identifiers. 

The company is also being subjected to increased regulatory scrutiny in addition to its response efforts. Investigations conducted by multiple state attorneys general are ongoing, as well as an internal review conducted by the company. 

According to Conduent's form 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission for 2025, evidence of active misuse of the compromised data has not been uncovered to date. Since the affected datasets are large, highly sensitive, and widely distributed, the absence of immediate exploitation does not significantly reduce long-term risk exposure, as regulators seek greater transparency, and affected parties pursue accountability through the courts, it is widely anticipated that disclosures, supplemental notifications, and legal proceedings will occur in the aftermath of the incident, prolonging its lifecycle well beyond its initial discovery. 

As well as its immediate impact, the incident illustrates the systemic risks that are embedded within third-party ecosystems, which can undermine even robust internal defenses due to vulnerabilities resulting from external dependences. 

As a result, organizations linked to service providers such as Conduent are exposed to the same threat surface. Therefore, a more detailed and continuously enforced vendor security posture is necessary.  It is critical to develop tightly scoped access controls on an operational basis, ensuring that third parties are given only the minimal permissions necessary to access the system and data, which are ideally controlled by just-in-time authentication methods. 

Using segmentation strategies, including demilitarized zones and isolated environments, further reduces the possibility of lateral movement from a compromised partner environment. These measures can be enhanced by implementing application allowlisting and execution controls which can prevent unauthorized tools from being deployed after a compromise, which is often the basis for post-compromise escalation. 

Increasingly, organizations are required to adopt continuous validation frameworks that monitor access to regulated datasets in real time, as opposed to periodic audits. It is important that vendors adhere to defined security baselines, breach disclosure timelines, and audit rights as stipulated in their contracts, and that data volumes and sensitivity are minimized wherever possible as a means of reducing security risks. 

To reconstruct attack paths and meet regulatory expectations in the event of an incident, robust logging and telemetry, designed for forensic readiness, remains critical. During this period, security operations and incident response teams must maintain close monitoring of vendor-linked authentication patterns and data access patterns in order to take prompt action, such as revocation of credentials or isolation of compromised endpoints at the onset of an attack.

In terms of executive level security strategy, the breach underscores the need to embed third-party risk into a multi-layered security strategy rather than treating it as a peripheral issue. Controls such as application allowlisting, formalized third-party risk management programs, which continuously evaluate partner security posture are among the steps required to ensuring cross-functional coordination, and implementation of standardized third-party risk management programs. 

A breach such as the one experienced by Conduent illustrates the fact that resilience in a profoundly interconnected digital infrastructure is no longer confined solely to internal controls, but is determined by the collective security discipline of every organization within it. This incident indicates that organizations need to rethink how trust is distributed across digital ecosystems in order to avoid further occurrences. It is no longer sufficient to consider security as a boundary confined within enterprise perimeters; it must be continuously validated across all external dependencies that process, store, or transmit sensitive data. 

A shift toward verifiable trust models, increased supply chain visibility, and enforceable accountability mechanisms is required to address this issue that extend beyond contractual assurances into measurable technical controls. As well as proactive resilience, it is vital to rigorously test detection, containment, and recovery capabilities against realistic scenarios of third-party compromise. 

It is anticipated that regulatory expectations will continue to evolve, and threat actors will continue to exploit aggregation points within service-driven architectures. Thus, organizations with a focus on transparency, continuous assurance, and coordinated response mechanisms will be better able to survive cascading breaches from afar.

Fake IT Support on Microsoft Teams Used to Deliver New A0Backdoor Threat

 


A contemporary cyber campaign has been identified where attackers are using Microsoft Teams to target employees in financial and healthcare organizations, eventually infecting systems with a newly observed malware known as A0Backdoor.

Research from BlueVoyant shows that the attackers rely heavily on social engineering. They begin by overwhelming an employee’s inbox with large volumes of spam emails. Soon after, they contact the same individual on Microsoft Teams, pretending to be part of the company’s IT support team and offering help to resolve the issue. This sequence is designed to build trust and make the request appear routine.

Once the victim is convinced, the attacker asks them to start a remote session using Quick Assist, a built-in Windows feature meant for remote troubleshooting. After access is granted, the attacker delivers a set of malicious tools through MSI installer files. These installers are digitally signed and hosted on a personal Microsoft cloud storage account, which helps them appear legitimate at first glance.

The researchers found that these MSI files are disguised as familiar Microsoft-related components, including Microsoft Teams elements and CrossDeviceService, a real Windows service used by the Phone Link application. This naming strategy helps the files blend in with normal system processes.

To execute the attack, the threat actor uses a technique called DLL sideloading. This involves running trusted Microsoft programs to load a malicious file named hostfxr.dll. Inside this file is data that is either compressed or encrypted. When the file is loaded into memory, it decrypts this data into shellcode and begins execution.

The malware also uses the CreateThread function to generate multiple threads. This behavior is not meant to improve performance but to make analysis harder. According to the researchers, creating too many threads can cause debugging tools to crash, even though it does not noticeably affect normal system activity.

After execution begins, the shellcode checks whether it is running inside a sandbox environment, which is commonly used by security analysts. If no such environment is detected, it proceeds to create a cryptographic key derived from SHA-256. This key is then used to decrypt the A0Backdoor payload, which is protected using AES encryption.

Once decrypted, the malware moves itself to a different region in memory and activates its main functions. It collects system-level information using Windows API calls such as DeviceIoControl, GetUserNameExW, and GetComputerNameW. This allows it to identify and profile the infected machine.

For communication with its operators, the malware avoids traditional methods and instead uses DNS traffic. It sends DNS MX queries that contain encoded data within complex subdomains to public recursive DNS servers. The responses it receives include MX records that carry encoded instructions. The malware extracts the relevant part of the response, decodes it, and then follows the commands.

Researchers explain that using MX records helps the traffic appear normal, making it harder to detect compared to other DNS-based techniques, especially those that rely on TXT records, which are more commonly monitored.

The campaign has already targeted at least two organizations, including a financial institution in Canada and a global healthcare company.

BlueVoyant assesses with moderate to high confidence that this activity builds on methods previously linked to the BlackBasta group. Although that group reportedly shut down after internal chat logs were leaked, parts of its approach appear to be continuing in this operation.

At the same time, the researchers point out that several elements in this campaign are new. These include the use of signed MSI installers, the A0Backdoor malware itself, and the use of DNS MX records for command-and-control communication.

This case reflects how attackers are adapting their methods by combining trusted tools, familiar platforms, and layered techniques to bypass detection.

North Korean Hackers Orchestrate Impeccable Multi Million Dollar Crypto Theft

 


Several highly calculated cloud intrusion campaigns have been linked to a North Korean threat actor identified as UNC4899, demonstrating the growing convergence between cyber espionage and financial crime. Using a sophisticated methodology, the operation appears to have been meticulously designed with the singular objective of siphoning millions of dollars in digital assets off a cryptocurrency organization in 2025. 

Researchers who have assessed the breach note a degree of precision and operational discipline that are consistent with state-sponsored activity, thereby reinforcing its moderate attribution to Pyongyang's cyber apparatus. Jade Sleet, PUKCHONG, Slow Pisces, and TraderTraitor are other aliases used by the group. 

The group is part of a larger trend in which adaptive threat actors are quietly infiltrating and persisting in complex cloud environments for the purpose of monetizing access. Despite the scale and persistence of these operations, they are not without precedent. 

ased on the findings of a United Nations Panel of Experts, at least 58 targeted intrusions against cryptocurrency platforms were perpetrated by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea between 2017 and 2023 that targeted the extraction of a total of $3 billion in virtual assets. 

A number of senior U.S. officials have expressed parallel views, including Anne Neuberger, Deputy National Security Advisor for Emerging Technology, that proceeds derived from these cyber campaigns are not simply opportunistic gains, but are strategically directed, with some of the proceeds believed to be used for nuclear weapons development. 

Collectively, these developments demonstrate how the use of cyber operations has become deeply ingrained in Pyongyang's overall statecraft, serving both as a means of revenue generation and as a means of enabling strategic capabilities. 

Further strengthening this dual-use approach is the sustained investment in technological infrastructure, operator training, and tooling sophistication of North Korea’s cyber units, which has enabled them to refine their tradecraft and maintain a persistent edge in both financial and intelligence-driven operations. 

Recently, threat intelligence has indicated a significant change in both target patterns and operational methodologies regarding cryptocurrency threats. Despite the fact that exchanges will continue to account for a significant share of financial losses in 2025, a greater proportion will involve high net-worth individuals whose digital asset portfolios are becoming increasingly attractive targets as a result. 

Threat actors are often able to exploit exploitable security gaps created by these individuals compared to institutional platforms because these individuals typically operate with relatively limited security controls. In several cases, it appears that the targeting extends beyond personal holdings, with individuals being targeted for their proximity to organizations managing substantial cryptocurrency reserves. 

As victimology has evolved, attack vectors have also evolved. Social engineering techniques are presently the dominant intrusion methods. In addition to exploiting vulnerabilities within blockchain infrastructure, adversaries are increasingly obtaining credentials and bypassing authentication safeguards by deception, impersonation, and psychological manipulation, underscoring human weakness as an important point of failure. 

In parallel, the post-exploitation phase has evolved into an increasingly adaptive contest between illicit actors and blockchain intelligence providers. Due to the increasing sophistication of analytical tools used by law enforcement and compliance teams in tracing transactional flows, North Korean-linked operators have enhanced their laundering strategies by increasing the level of technical complexity and layering of operations. 

In recent years, these methods have become increasingly complex, involving iterative mixing cycles, interchain transfers, as well as the deliberate use of non-monitored blockchain networks with limited visibility. 

A number of tactics can also be employed to maximize cost through the acquisition of protocol-specific utility tokens, manipulate refund mechanisms to redirect funds to newly created wallets, and create bespoke tokens within controlled ecosystems for the purpose of obscuring data. 

A sustained and evolving cat-and-mouse dynamic is evident in these practices, in which advances in forensic capabilities are accompanied by escalation of adversarial tradecraft. Further contextualization of this incident is provided by Google Cloud’s Cloud Threat Horizons Report, which reveals an intrusion chain involving social engineering as well as the exploiting of trust boundaries between corporate and personal environments. 

Initial access was reportedly gained by tricking a developer into downloading a trojanized file masquerading as a legitimate open-source collaboration. A seemingly benign interaction resulted in compromising a personal workstation, which ultimately became the gateway to the organization's corporate environment and, ultimately, its cloud infrastructure as a whole. 

A nuanced understanding of cloud-native architecture was demonstrated by the attackers once access had been established. By exploiting legitimate DevOps processes, they harvested credentials and manipulated managed database services, including Cloud SQL instances, to enable the covert extraction of cryptocurrency assets. This post-compromise activity has been intentionally designed to blend malicious operations with normal system behavior.

Through the modification of Kubernetes configurations and the execution of carefully crafted commands, threat actors were able to maintain persistence while minimizing detection. This tactic is increasingly referred to as “living off-the-cloud” in which native platform features are repurposed to maintain unauthorized access. 

Moreover, it reveals systemic weaknesses in the management of sensitive data and credentials in hybrid environments, especially where personal and corporate workflows are not adequately separated. Security practitioners emphasize the need for layered defensive measures in order to mitigate such threats, including stringent identity verification controls, tighter governance over data transmission channels, and isolation within cloud execution contexts in order to contain potential vulnerabilities. 

A growing consensus is urging the reduction of the attack surface by limiting the use of external devices and unsecured communication methods, including ad hoc file-sharing protocols, to reduce attack vulnerabilities, as adversaries continue to develop methods for exploiting human trust alongside technical complexity.

There has been a shocking increase in losses approaching the $2 billion mark, which serves as a stark indication of both the maturation of adversarial capabilities and the expansion of the attack surface within the digital asset ecosystem. At the same time, advanced blockchain intelligence reinforces the importance of protecting against such threats at the same time. 

In spite of North Korean-linked operators' continued refinement of tactics, distributed ledger technology offers a structural advantage to investigators equipped with sophisticated forensic tools due to its inherent transparency. Using deep transaction tracing, behavioral analytics, and cross-chain visibility, firms such as Elliptic have demonstrated how illicit financial flows can be illuminated that would otherwise remain undetected. 

There is a clear indication that the balance between attackers and defenders is evolving as threat actors innovate in obfuscation and laundering. Analytics-driven oversight is paralleling this innovation, enabling industry stakeholders and law enforcement agencies to identify anomalies, attribute malicious activities, and disrupt financial pipelines in an increasingly precise manner. 

Consequently, blockchain transparency, once regarded primarily as a feature of decentralization, is now emerging as a critical enforcement mechanism, supporting efforts to maintain trust, security, and innovation while maintaining the integrity of the crypto ecosystem.

China Warns Government Staff Against Using OpenClaw AI Over Data Security Concerns

 

Recently, Chinese government offices along with public sector firms began advising staff not to add OpenClaw onto official gadgets - sources close to internal discussions say. Security issues are a key reason behind these alerts. As powerful artificial intelligence spreads faster across workplaces, unease about information safety has been rising too. 

Though built on open code, OpenClaw operates with surprising independence, handling intricate jobs while needing little guidance. Because it acts straight within machines, interest surged quickly - not just among coders but also big companies and city planners. Across Chinese industrial zones and digital centers, its presence now spreads quietly yet steadily. Still, top oversight bodies along with official news outlets keep pointing to possible dangers tied to the app. 

If given deep access to operating systems, these artificial intelligence programs might expose confidential details, wipe essential documents, or handle personal records improperly - officials say. In agencies and big companies managing vast amounts of vital information, those threats carry heavier weight. A report notes workers in public sector firms received clear directions to avoid using OpenClaw, sometimes extending to private gadgets. Despite lacking an official prohibition, insiders from a federal body say personnel faced firm warnings about downloading the software over data risks. 

How widely such limits apply - across locations or agencies - is still uncertain. A careful approach reveals how Beijing juggles competing priorities. Even as officials push forward with plans to embed artificial intelligence into various sectors - spurring development through widespread tech adoption - they also work to contain threats linked to digital security and information control. Growing global tensions add pressure, sharpening concerns about who manages data, and under what conditions. Uncertainty shapes decisions more than any single policy goal. 

Even with such cautions in place, some regional projects still move forward using OpenClaw. Take, for example, health-related programs under Shenzhen’s city government - these are said to have run extensive training drills featuring the artificial intelligence model, tied into wider upgrades across digital infrastructure. Elsewhere within the same city, one administrative area turned to OpenClaw when building a specialized helper designed specifically for public sector workflows. 

Although national leaders call for restraint, some regional bodies might test limited applications tied to progress targets. Whether broader limits emerge - or monitoring simply increases - stays unclear. What happens next depends on shifting priorities at different levels. Recently joining OpenAI, Peter Steinberger originally created OpenClaw as an open-source initiative hosted on GitHub. Attention around the tool has grown since his new role became known. 

When AI systems gain greater independence and embed themselves into daily operations, questions about safety will grow sharper - especially where confidential or controlled information is involved.

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