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by Blackthorn 3700 days ago
> Any change to the medical equipment requires another authorization or it's prohibited.

Honestly, this isn't a bad decision. If the device was tested and certified with specific software, a software upgrade is not guaranteed to not cause a problem.

1 comments

using software with known problems in order to avoid potential problems from an upgrade does not seem like a non-bad decision
Is the medical device working right now? Yes. Could, upon upgrading, the device stop working, possibly in a subtle way that might kill somebody? Yes.

The approval process for medical devices is rightfully difficult. Software upgrades, even if they seem trivial, should not be a backdoor process of bypassing testing and approval.

...and could software deployed to the device by some random who just exploited some well-known security flaw that never got patched, kill people?
This whole discussion has been about stuff air-gapped. That's not a guarantee when you have USB ports, but it does help.