Qantas data breach: Here’s what was stolen in cyberattack, what the airline said, and what you can do

On July 9, Australian Aviation Major Qantas Airways admitted that pirates have accessed personal information of 5.7 million customers. Bloomberg notified.
This is the highest profile cyber attack in Australia since the tuchmunication giant Optus and Health Insurer Medibank was shot in 2022 in 2022. Reuters report.
Airline shares were traded at a rate of 1.1 percent in Sydney, according to the report.
Which data disappeared in the cyber attack?
In the report, data violations that occurred last week, passenger names, addresses, phone numbers and food preferences of the changing customer details endangered.
More than one million passengers have access to phone numbers, birth dates or home addresses, Reuters report. Four million customers had names stolen during the hack and E -Posta addresses.
What Qantas said about the cyber attack…
On July 9, Qantas said that the passengers began to explain what certain information disappeared in the attack.
The BB report added that there is no “evidence ıy that any of the stolen data was explained to the public, and that the carrier was“ watching the situation with the help of expert cyber security experts ”.
An analysis by the airline since the Hack found that the financial impact was now “limited, because there was no credit card detail or other financial data in the violation. However, this may change more information waiting for more information.
In addition, Qantas, often flying miles, said that enough data has not been stolen to enable computer pirates to access this information.
Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson under review
In the report, “It seems to be damaged”, he added that the cyber attack increases concerns about CEO Vanessa Hudson’s crisis management.
Since he took over in 2023, he has tried to recover his reputation lost by his predecessor Joyce.
What can the affected Qantas customers do?
- In a statement on July 9, Hudson said that the carrier advised the affected customers about the necessary support services to apply and access.
- He added that Qantas has taken extra security measures since the incident and will continue to review what happened.
- Another security measure that customers can take is to replace passwords to e -mails, calculations and applications that may be due to leaked data.
- Apply a two -factor authentication for all entries and contact your bank, publication or other relevant authorities to inform them about the potential violation.
Qantas is joining a growing airline list in recent weeks, including Alaska Air Group Inc.’s Hawaiian Airlines and Canada’s Westjet Airlines.
The US Federal Investigation Office warned that the dispersed spider of the malicious cyber crime group targeted the airlines using techniques that mimic to hacking employees or contractor to IT systems.
(With the inputs of Bloomberg and Reuters)



