Comparison Overview
Mount Sinai Solutions

Mount Sinai Solutions
150 E 42nd St, New York, NY, US, 10017
Last Update: 21/02/2026
Mount Sinai Solutions is a leading value-based care provider in the greater New York region. Serving over 400,000 lives, Mount Sinai Solutions is focused on the needs of patients and their employers and unions. It offers products, either directly or through partnerships...

UnitedHealthcare
9700 Healthcare Lane, Minnetonka, 55343, US
Last Update: 08/07/2026
When it comes to your health, everything matters. That’s why UnitedHealthcare is helping people live healthier lives and making the health system work better for everyone. Our health plans are there for you in moments big and small, delivering a simple experience, affor...
Compliance Ranges Comparison

Mount Sinai Solutions







UnitedHealthcare






Benchmark & Cyber Underwriting Signals
Incidents vs Hospitals and Health Care Industry Avg (This Year)
No incidents recorded for Mount Sinai Solutions in 2026.
Incidents vs Hospitals and Health Care Industry Avg (This Year)
UnitedHealthcare has 5.66% fewer incidents than the average of all companies with at least one recorded incident.
Incident History - Mount Sinai Solutions (X = Date, Y = Severity)
Mount Sinai Solutions cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Incident History - UnitedHealthcare (X = Date, Y = Severity)
UnitedHealthcare cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Notable Incidents

Mount Sinai Solutions

UnitedHealthcare
FAQ
Latest Global CVEs
Vim is an open source, command line text editor. Prior to 9.2.0735, the C omni-completion script in runtime/autoload/ccomplete.vim interpolates the typeref: or typename: extension field of a tags entry, without escaping, into a :vimgrep pattern that is run through :execute. Because :vimgrep honors the bar as a command separator, a crafted tag field can close the search pattern and append an arbitrary Ex command; opening a hostile .c file whose project tags file contains such an entry and invoking C omni-completion runs that command as the editing user. This issue is fixed in version 9.2.0735.
Vim is an open source, command line text editor. Prior to 9.2.0725, the single-byte branch of spell_soundfold_sal() in src/spell.c translates a word through a spell file's SAL sound-folding rules into a caller-owned result buffer, but its result writes are guarded with reslen < MAXWLEN, allowing reslen to reach MAXWLEN before res[reslen] = NUL writes one byte past the end of the MAXWLEN-element stack buffer. A boundary-length word passed to soundfold(), or reached via sound-based spell suggestion while a SAL-based spell language is active under a non-multibyte 8-bit encoding, can corrupt the eval_soundfold() stack frame and crash the editor. This issue is fixed in version 9.2.0725.
Vim is an open source, command line text editor. Prior to 9.2.0736, the PHP omni-completion script in runtime/autoload/phpcomplete.vim interpolates a class or trait name, taken from the contents of the edited buffer, into a search() pattern that is run via win_execute() without escaping. A name containing a single quote can terminate the search() string argument early, and because the bar is honored as an Ex command separator, the remainder of the name is run as Ex commands; via the :! command this allows arbitrary operating-system command execution when a victim opens a crafted PHP file and invokes omni-completion. This issue is fixed in version 9.2.0736.
SiYuan is an open-source personal knowledge management system. Prior to 3.7.1, Asset.render in app/src/asset/index.ts interpolates the unsanitized this.path value into HTML assigned to innerHTML, allowing a crafted asset link containing a double quote to break out of the src attribute, inject an event handler, and execute JavaScript that can run OS commands in the Electron renderer. This issue is fixed in versions 3.7.1-alpha.2 and 3.7.1.
SiYuan is an open-source personal knowledge management system. Prior to 3.7.1, POST /api/file/globalCopyFiles accepts attacker-supplied absolute source paths and relies on util.IsSensitivePath in kernel/util/path.go, whose denylist misses common home-directory credential files such as .git-credentials, .netrc, .pgpass, .kube/config, .docker/config.json, and .gnupg, allowing an authenticated administrator or API-token user to copy those files into the workspace and exfiltrate them through the file API. This issue is fixed in versions 3.7.1-alpha.2 and 3.7.1.
- https://github.com/siyuan-note/siyuan/commit/914c5180a88d17f6d38716a56483327b367ef55f
- https://github.com/siyuan-note/siyuan/commit/b54fee401799d987d2fd2888220938ad599b8c5e
- https://github.com/siyuan-note/siyuan/releases/tag/v3.7.1
- https://github.com/siyuan-note/siyuan/security/advisories/GHSA-vmm8-3ccv-ppvw