Volume 13 - Issue 2
The supply chain of a Living Lab: Modelling security, privacy, and vulnerability issues alongside with their impact and potential mitigation strategies
- Kitty Kioskli
University of Essex, School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering, Institute of Analytics and Data Science (IADS), Essex, United Kingdom, Gruppo Maggioli, Research and Development Lab, Athens, Greece, trustilio B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
kitty.kioskli@essex.ac.uk
- Daniele Dellagiacoma
University of Brighton, School of Sport & Health Sciences, Centre for Secure, Intelligent and Usable Systems (CSIUS), Brighton, United Kingdom
- Theofanis Fotis
University of Brighton, School of Sport & Health Sciences, Centre for Secure, Intelligent and Usable Systems (CSIUS), Brighton, United Kingdom
- Haralambos Mouratidis
University of Essex, School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering, Institute of Analytics and Data Science (IADS), Essex, United Kingdom
Keywords: Living Lab, digital health, supply chain, security, privacy, mitigation actions
Abstract
Worldwide, vulnerabilities and weak security strategies are exploited everyday by adversaries in
healthcare organizations. Healthcare is targeted because these crimes are high-reward and low-risk.
The attacks differ every time, from hacking medical devices, such as sensors, to stealing patients’
data from electronic health records databases. The effects of these attacks are both short and long
term lived, depending on the incidence handling process that each sector is adopting. The Covid-19
pandemic has exposed, in full, that healthcare systems are vulnerable and vastly unprotected while
representing a threat to global public health. An important part of the healthcare ecosystem, for
the development and validation of innovative tools and methodologies, is the Living Labs which are
community-based and adopt co-creation as their primary approach. Because of the many stakeholders
involved in the processes of the Living Labs, cybersecurity ought to be in their center. Besides
the proven great importance of the Living Labs as part of healthcare, there is no research on security
and privacy issues around them. The main purpose of this paper is to explore the supply chain of
a Living Lab and identify its security and privacy challenges alongside with its vulnerabilities. The
SecTro tool has been used to provide a thorough analysis which follows the Privacy-by-Design approach.
The originality and novelty of our work are shown from: (i) moving one step further from
desk studies by including requirements from citizens and professionals; (ii) being integrated into an
effort from various researchers to supply a holistic approach to Data Privacy Governance; (iii) the
first time which a paper is considering and analysing the supply chain of the Living Labs.