The Gold Coast Bulletin

Albo on hold in call to foot bill

No answer from Optus

- ELLEN RANSLEY

EMBATTLED telco Optus has not responded to a request to foot the bill for replacing millions of Australian­s’ passports in the wake of its data breach.

Almost 10 million Australian­s were affected in the hack, with personal details ranging from their full name and address to their passport, driver’s licence and Medicare numbers accessed by the hackers.

Anthony Albanese, who met with chief Kelly Bayer Rosmarin on Saturday, revealed the company had yet to respond to the government’s demand.

“The taxpayers shouldn’t pay for this. Our view is very clear. We’ll continue to pursue that view,” the Prime Minister said. “We await Optus to respond to our very clear, written request to them.”

On Wednesday, Foreign Minister Penny Wong asked for confirmati­on from Optus that the company would cover the costs of new passports.

A replacemen­t passport costs $193.

“There is no justificat­ion for these Australian­s – or for taxpayers more broadly on their behalf – to bear the cost of obtaining a new passport,” she wrote in a letter.

The fallout of the breach has prompted the government to reassess Australia’s data and privacy laws and vow to update them as a matter of urgency.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus said Optus’s response had been a “mess” and a “debacle”, and the government was using the power of hindsight to make sure nothing like this could happen again.

Questions have swirled as to why Optus kept the data for so many years.

Mr Dreyfus said he was hopeful the laws could be brought in “before the end of the year”.

“If a company says we need to see your driver’s licence or we need to see your passport number for the purpose of establishi­ng that you are who you say you are, that should be the end – one might think – of the company keeping all that data,” he said.

“They don’t seem to me to have a valid reason for saying ‘we need to keep that for the next decade’.

“Obviously, the more data that’s kept the bigger the problem there is about keeping it safe, the bigger the problem there is about the potential damage that’s going to be done by a huge hack like what’s happened here.”

Mr Dreyfus said the Privacy Act desperatel­y needed to be updated.

“We know that there needs to be reform. Regrettabl­y, the former government simply sat on the need for reform, the need to bring the Privacy Act into the digital age,” he said.

Mr Albanese told parliament on Wednesday that the laws needed to be overhauled.

“Clearly, we need better national laws after a decade of inaction to manage the immense amount of data collected by companies about Australian­s, and clear consequenc­es for when they do manage (it),” the Prime Minister said.

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