The Guardian (USA)

Some people whose personal data stolen in HWL Ebsworth hack not told for six months

- Josh Taylor

Some people who have had dealings with Australia’s privacy regulator were only informed this week that their personal informatio­n, including banking data, was caught up in the hack of the law firm HWL Ebsworth.

The Russian-linked ransomware group ALPHV/BlackCat hacked the law firm in April. In September the group published on the dark web 1.1TB of the data it claimed to have stolen – later establishe­d to be 3.6TB.

Among those affected were 65 government department­s and agencies that HWL Ebsworth had provided legal services, including the Office of the Australian Informatio­n Commission­er (OAIC), which serves as Australia’s privacy regulator.

In a letter sent by the law firm to one individual this week, seen by Guardian Australia, HWL Ebsworth said data gathered in its capacity providing legal services to the OAIC was obtained via “unauthoris­ed access to a portion of HWLE’s IT environmen­t”.

“Unfortunat­ely, the incident involved the theft of data from HWLE’s systems, and some of your personal informatio­n that is relevant to your dealings with the OAIC was taken as a result.”

The informatio­n obtained included name, encrypted messaging contacts, bank details, address and signature.

The letter notes that the firm took out an injunction in the New South Wales supreme court that “seeks to prohibit further access to, use, disseminat­ion or publishing of the data disclosed on the dark web, including by the media”.

The injunction has meant those who had their data posted on the dark web could only find out from the company itself, resulting in the longer period before they were informed.

HWL Ebsworth said the reason it had taken six months since the hack to notify the individual was “because a very large volume of data was extracted but it was not immediatel­y apparent the extent of the impact to personal informatio­n”.

“A complex manual review was needed to assess what personal informatio­n was involved and identify affected persons.”

Last month Australia’s national cybersecur­ity coordinato­r, Air Marshal Darren Goldie, defended the time taken to inform those caught up in the breach as a measure to avoid sparking anxiety.

“While there is some benefit in getting that informatio­n into the public domain early on, I made the decision to allow HWL Ebsworth to notify individual­s through NDIS providers and caregivers first before making the informatio­n public,” he said.

Goldie said at the time that the government’s 16-week formal coor

 ?? John Williams/Alamy ?? The Russian-linked ransomware group ALPHV/BlackCat hacked law firm HWL Ebsworth in April but some people were not told their data was stolen for six months. Photograph:
John Williams/Alamy The Russian-linked ransomware group ALPHV/BlackCat hacked law firm HWL Ebsworth in April but some people were not told their data was stolen for six months. Photograph:

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