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Ritual apologies after data breaches only go so far. We need better laws to stop these incidents happening at all.
With Qantas now admitting hackers stole data from nearly 6 million customers, for some disgruntled pilots, it's further proof of operational rot as customers are left picking up the pieces.
The Australian airline says hackers looted data on 5.7 million customers, including names, email addresses and phone numbers.
Australia's Qantas Airways said on Wednesday more than a million customers had their phone number, birth date or home address ...
On this week’s Australian Aviation Podcast, Adam and Jake are joined by special guest David Hollingworth from Cyber Daily to ...
What happens next when your data is leaked in a data breach like the one at Qantas? Cyber criminals have creative ways to get what they want.
Australian airline Qantas has confirmed that 5.7 million people have been impacted by a recent data breach, in which threat actors stole customers' data.
The cyber incident was discovered on June 30, and is believed to have compromised the data of up to 6 million customers.
Cybercriminals hit Qantas in a major data breach that exposed information from up to six million customers. Airline data ...
Australia's Qantas Airways said on Wednesday more than a million customers had their phone number, birth date or home address ...
Australian flag carrier begins notifying millions of individuals after a cyber attack on a call centre, confirming that while ...