Can The Ventilators In Hospitals Be Hacked? Watch This Mind Blowing Report From Millennial Millie
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0etrxm79Lo
If you don’t see the video above, you can click here to watch it on Rumble.
This was a recent video release from Millennial Millie and it shares some very eye opening information!
Among other things, Millie talks about how some medical ventilators with QNX on them could have been potentially hacked in order to change the settings.
Could THAT be one of the reasons why so many die when they are on them?!
In this article from ValueWalk.com it says,
“According to the documents released by WikiLeaks, the QNX software was on the CIA’s potential hacking list. The organization’s Embedded Devices Branch has several potential mission areasm of which QNX was one, according to some CIA meeting notes.”
You can read more about QNX and the Embedded Devices Branch notes on WikiLeaks here.
The question is, how many hospitals had ventilators with QNX in them?
I don’t have that exact number, but according to Blackberry’s own report on QNX…
“Global leaders such as Ford, Audi, Cisco, General Electric, Lockheed Martin, and Siemens depend on BlackBerry QNX technologies.”
Of course, Siemens makes medical ventilators.
And on GrandViewResearch.com, it talks about the medical ventilator market. It says…
“Some prominent players in the global mechanical ventilator market include:
-
Getinge AB
-
Medtronic
-
Vyaire Medical Inc.
-
Drägerwerk AG & Co. KGaA
-
Koninklijke Philips N.V.
-
Hamilton Medical
-
GE Healthcare
-
Smiths Medical
-
ZOLL Medical Corporation
-
Shenzhen Mindray Bio-Medical Electronics Co., Ltd.”
You might find it interesting to research some of those companies too.
But GE Healthcare is on that list.
GE of course short for General Electric, a company that “depends on Blackberry QNX technologies” according to Blackberry itself.
Also, even the FDA has warned about BlackBerry QNX!
Here are a few articles talking about Blackberry QNX
From The FDA website: BlackBerry QNX Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities May Affect Drug Manufacturing Equipment