Easier to name the companies that haven't suffered a breachDid you forget Medibank, Latitude, MediSecure (lol), ClubsNSW, Service NSW, Telstra, etc?
Oh, I think that is harsh! I am sure they monitor the storage requirements for the collected data! How much gets read, yes that is the question. Assume a growing involvement of AI in SIEM review, but where QF are up to is anybody's guess."Strengthen system monitoring and detection" is most likely sends the system feed to another instance of SIEM somewhere else ...... But then no one actually monitors the SIEM anyway.
It's often the internal systems that are the least protected, as application teams heavily rely on network-level security and ignore application-level security.
Easier to name the companies that haven't suffered a breach![]()
I forgot my password earlier this year and tried to change it do year (not month) and it wouldn't allow it.They certainly have in the past, last year I found out my elderly dad had his pin as DDMM of his birthday and forced him to change it to something not obvious.
Is that less or more likely than what someone else above hoped for that execs would be held responsible and their bonuses confiscated?Someone over on OzBargain wanted them to gift 50k points "as an apology". Good luck getting that!![]()
I mean at least that alone seems to have been enough to (maybe) prevent a bunch of account fraud ala what happened to Virgin Velocity awhile back before they bothered adding it.Yes.. 2FA...
Easier to name the companies that haven't suffered a breach![]()
Well, I hold an account for son who has never used it. Zero status. Zero points. He got this email. We, on the other hand, both active and WP have received - nothing.Received the first email about the problem:
Now wait and see for a second![]()
Well, I hold an account for son who has never used it. Zero status. Zero points. He got this email. We, on the other hand, both active and WP have received - nothing.
That would be 6 million records, not 6k.I got the generic email which just says same thing as the website, what I want to know is specifically if my own details were in the 6k records breached or not.
Give it time. For such a massive email send, it's pretty normal that it will be split into smaller batches that are sent over an extended period of time.We, on the other hand, both active and WP have received - nothing.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Experian via Commonwealth Bank.Equifax ?
Indeed - given that they don't actually use the DOBs anymore, I don't know why (other than sheer inertia/laziness) they've been retained.leaking birth dates is a huge security violation, I'm surprised how their email attempts to downplay the severity
I wish more people were aware of how sensitive & important it is to guard your birth date
Mine went to spam because it came from an email address I’ve not seen Qantas use before.Well, I hold an account for son who has never used it. Zero status. Zero points. He got this email. We, on the other hand, both active and WP have received - nothing.
You don't need to worry about brute forcing individual accounts when you have so many pairs of FF# and surname.Brute forcing 4 digit pins is not an option as accounts quickly get locked out but having FF# and Surname significantly lowers the bar.
They try and brute force MyGov all the time. The pro tip is to switch off your email address as a username (which they seem to have done), set up a passkey and turn off passwords.I just got locked out of my MyGov account - I wonder if it's related to the hack. Hackers already trying to brute force accounts?
View attachment 454780
Mine went to spam because it came from an email address I’ve not seen Qantas use before.
Way to give customers peace of mind.![]()