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Optus claiming i spent money
Optus claiming i spent money





  1. Optus claiming i spent money for free#
  2. Optus claiming i spent money drivers#
  3. Optus claiming i spent money free#

Please attend a Customer Service Centre with documentation during open hours… 1/2- Mark Bailey MP September 27, 2022

Optus claiming i spent money free#

New licences, with new numbers, with be provided free of charge to Queenslanders impacted by the Optus breach. Queensland Transport Minister Mark Bailey posted to Twitter that new licences with new numbers would be provided free of charge to Queenslanders impacted by the breach.

Optus claiming i spent money drivers#

State governments on Tuesday addressed concerns over leaked drivers licence details, with some saying they would work to support those affected who wish to replace their licences. State governments offer help to replace victims' licences On Monday, Ms O'Neil accused the company of leaving customers data vulnerable to a "basic hack", which Optus has denied. Optus customers dating back to 2017 could be at risk of identity theft. Optus said it had been advised by police not to give a number for how many customers have been affected, and that it had contacted all those whose information was compromised in the attack. Reports today make this a priority," Ms O'Neil said. "Consumers have a right to know exactly what individual personal information has been compromised in Optus's communications to them. She said Medicare numbers were "never advised to form part of the compromised information".

Optus claiming i spent money for free#

Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil said she was "incredibly concerned" to hear data from the Optus breach included Medicare numbers, and that customer information had been offered for free and ransom. The AFP is working closely with Optus, the Australian Signals Directorate and overseas law enforcement. "Criminals, who use pseudonyms and anonymising technology, can't see us but I can tell you that we can see them."Īsssistant Commissioner Gough said it was an offence to sell or buy stolen identification credentials, with penalties of up to 10 years' imprisonment.(ABC News: Tim Swanston/File) "We are aware of reports of stolen data being sold on the dark web and that is why the AFP is monitoring the dark web using a range of specialist capabilities," she said. The AFP on Monday afternoon said it launched Operation Hurricane to identify the people behind the breach and protect Australians from identity fraud.Īssistant Commissioner Cyber Command Justine Gough said the investigation was going to be complex and lengthy. Optus chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin told ABC's AM on Tuesday that the company was doing "everything possible to be transparent, to be on the front foot".Īsked about a post last week by a user claiming to be selling the data, she said: "We have seen that there is a post like that on the dark web and the Australian Federal Police is all over that."īayer Rosmarin said the company was not "the villains" in the situation and that customers should be on high alert. The account last week claimed the records included email addresses, dates of birth, first and last names, phone numbers, drivers licence and passport numbers. The account also conveyed the author's "deepest apology" to Optus and wished the company well. "Australia will see no gain in fraud, this can be monitored," the post read. The user said they were sorry to the Australians who had had their data leaked.

optus claiming i spent money

"We can't if we even want to: personally deleted data from drive (Only copy)."

optus claiming i spent money

"We will not sale data to anyone," they posted. In the account's latest post on Tuesday, they appeared to back down entirely, citing "too many eyes". Late last week, the same anonymous user posted a sample of data ostensibly from the breach, with an offer not to sell the data if Optus paid a $US1 million ransom. Some cyber security experts believe the account is legitimate, but it has not been confirmed by Optus, or the Australian Federal Police (AFP). "Was mistake to scrape publish data in first place." "Ransom not payed but we don't care any more," the user posted to website BreachForums just before noon on Tuesday.

optus claiming i spent money

The account apologised to 10,200 Australians whose records it claimed to have leaked just hours earlier. Photo: 123rfĪn online account that claims to be behind the Optus data breach says it has deleted its only copy of customers' information and it no longer cares about a ransom. Some cyber security experts believe the account which has apologised for the breach is legitimate, but it has not been confirmed by Optus or the Australian Federal Police.







Optus claiming i spent money