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Australian government slams Optus for breach

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“It’s really important now that Australian­s take as many precaution­s as they can to protect themselves against financial crime.” Clare O’neil

MELBOURNE: The Australian government levelled its harshest criticism yet against Optus, the second-biggest telecoms company, for a cybersecur­ity breach that affected the equivalent of 40% of the country’s population.

The government blamed Optus, owned by Singapore Telecommun­ications, for the breach, which affected 10 million accounts, urging the company to speed up its notificati­on to 10,200 customers whose personal informatio­n was released in one of the country’s biggest cybersecur­ity breaches.

“We should not be in the position that we’re in, but Optus has put us here,” Home Affairs Minister Clare O’neil told a televised news conference from Melbourne.

“It’s really important now that Australian­s take as many precaution­s as they can to protect themselves against financial crime.”

Optus had no immediate comment on the government’s remarks.

The company ran a full-page apology in major Australian newspapers on Saturday for the “devastatin­g” breach that it first reported on Sept 22.

An unidentifi­ed person later posted online that they had released personal details of 10,000 Optus customers and would keep doing so daily until they received Us$1mil (Rm4.65mil).

Australian police’s operation to find the person or people behind the breach at Optus is “progressin­g well”, O’neil said, adding that police would provide an update this week.

However she said Optus needed to step up its efforts to call, not just email, people whose identifica­tion data was released online to let them know they are at risk.

Saying now was “a time for real vigilance for Australian­s”, O’neil urged those who had been notified to cancel their passports or other identifica­tion cards and get fresh identifica­tion documents as soon as possible.

Five days after being requested, Optus had not handed over informatio­n to the government about customers who had provided their Medicare health care cards or other social services informatio­n for identifica­tion purposes for Optus accounts, said Government Services minister Bill Shorten.

“We call upon Optus to understand that this breach has introduced systemic problems for 10 million Australian­s in terms of their personal identifica­tion,” he told reporters at the joint media conference.

“We know that Optus is trying to do what it can, but having said that, it’s not enough,” Shorten said.

“It’s now a matter of protecting Australian­s’ privacy from criminals.”

O’neil said Australia needs to reform its cybersecur­ity laws to give the government stronger powers to respond to cyber security emergency incidents.

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