The Fiji Times

Australia fines Optus

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SINGAPORE Telecommun­ications-owned Australian telecom firm Optus has paid a $A1.5million ($F2.2million) fine after the local communicat­ions watchdog found large-scale breaches of public safety rules around emergency services, the Australian Communicat­ions and Media Authority (ACMA) said on Wednesday.

An investigat­ion by the ACMA has revealed that about 200,000 Optus mobile customers were left at risk due to the failure of the telecommun­ications company to upload required customer informatio­n to a database used by emergency services between January 2021 and September 2023.

The database, known as the Integrated Public Number Database (IPND), is utilised to send emergency text messages to customers during disasters such as floods, as well as informatio­n to local police, fire-brigade and ambulance services.

“While we are not aware of anyone being directly harmed due to the non-compliance in this case, it’s alarming that Optus placed so many customers in this position for so long,” ACMA member Samantha Yorke said. She added that the local watchdog initiated investigat­ions based indication­s from a compliance audit that Optus was not uploading data.

An Optus spokespers­on said the firm apologises for the incident.

“Optus accepts that proper audits and checks were not in place to ensure IPND obligation­s were being met for services we supply through our partner brands,” the spokespers­on said.

The company accepted the watchdog’s findings and has agreed to an “Enforceabl­e Undertakin­g” to complete an independen­t review of the processes used to manage compliance with IPND obligation­s.

Australia’s No. 2 telco, Optus, experience­d an outage in November, which left nearly half the population without internet or cell phone services, prompting investigat­ions and the departure of the CEO.

 ?? ?? View of an Optus shop in Sydney, Australia. Singapore Telecommun­ications-owned Australian telecom firm Optus has paid a $A1.5million ($F2.2million) fine after the local communicat­ions watchdog found large-scale breaches of public safety rules around emergency services. REUTERS/FILE
View of an Optus shop in Sydney, Australia. Singapore Telecommun­ications-owned Australian telecom firm Optus has paid a $A1.5million ($F2.2million) fine after the local communicat­ions watchdog found large-scale breaches of public safety rules around emergency services. REUTERS/FILE

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