Cyber-Attackers Claim to Have Accessed Customer Data at Medibank Australia

 

According to Medibank, which covers one in six Australians, an unidentified person notified the company that some 200 gigabytes of data had been stolen. This included medical diagnoses and medical treatments, as part of a theft that began a week earlier when the company disclosed a theft of 200 gigabytes of data.
As far as the number of its 4 million customers who may have been affected, the company did not provide information. However, it warned that the number is likely to rise as the issue unfolds. It was announced by the Australian Federal Police that they had opened an investigation into the breach, but that they had no further comments to make.
An Australian newspaper report has warned that the data of at least 10 million customers may have been stolen. This adds a heightened layer of intrigue to a wave of cyberattacks on the country’s largest companies since No. 2 Telco Optus, owned by Singapore Telecommunications Ltd, revealed a month ago that the data of ten million customers may have been stolen. 
The majority of public commentary has so far focused on the possibility that hackers could gain access to bank accounts if they steal data or used identity theft to gain access to personal information. An article in the Sydney Morning Herald stated that it received a message from a person claiming to be the Medibank

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