SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – Australian airline Qantas said Sunday, 12 October, that data from 5,7 million customers stolen in a major cyberattack this year had been shared online, part of a leak affecting dozens of firms worldwide.
Disney, Google, IKEA, Toyota, McDonald’s and fellow airlines Air France and KLM are also reported to have had data stolen in a cyberattack targeting software firm Salesforce, with the information now being held to ransom.
The stolen Qantas data includes customers’ names, email addresses, phone numbers, birthdates and, in some cases, home addresses, gender and meal preferences. No credit card details, personal financial information or passport details were compromised, the company said.
“Qantas is one of a number of companies globally that has had data released by cyber criminals following the airline’s cyber incident in early July, where customer data was stolen via a third party platform,” the company said in a statement.
The blue-chip Australian firm confirmed in July that hackers had targeted one of its customer contact centres, breaching a computer system used by Salesforce.
Qantas said it had obtained a legal injunction with the Supreme Court of New South Wales to prevent the stolen data being “accessed, viewed, released, used, transmitted or published”.
Cybersecurity expert Troy Hunt told AFP that would do little to prevent the spread of the data. “It’s frankly ridiculous,” he said. “It obviously doesn’t stop criminals at all anywhere, and it also really doesn’t have any effect on people outside of Australia.”
Hackers ‘laying siege’
Salesforce said this month it was ‘aware of recent extortion attempts by threat actors’.
In response to questions about the leak, tech giant Google pointed AFP to an August statement in which it said one of its corporate Salesforce servers had been targeted. It did not confirm if the data had been leaked.
“Google responded to the activity, performed an impact analysis and has completed email notifications to the potentially affected businesses,” said Melanie Lombardi, head of Google Cloud Security Communications.
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Cybersecurity analysts have linked the hack to individuals with ties to an alliance of cybercriminals called Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters.
Research group Unit 42 said in a note the group had ‘asserted responsibility for laying siege to customer Salesforce tenants as part of a coordinated effort to steal data and hold it for ransom’.
The hackers had reportedly set an October 10 deadline for ransom payment.
‘Oldest tricks in the book’
The FBI last month issued a warning about such attacks targeting Salesforce.
The agency said hackers posing as IT workers had tricked customer support employees into granting them access to sensitive data.
“They have been very effective,” expert Hunt said. “And it hasn’t been using any sophisticated technical exploits… they have exploited really the oldest tricks in the books.”
The hack of data from Australia’s biggest airline comes as a string of major cyberattacks in the country has raised concerns about the protection of personal data.
Qantas apologised last year after a glitch with its mobile app exposed some passengers’ names and travel details.
And major ports handling 40 percent of Australia’s freight trade ground to a halt in 2023 after hackers infiltrated computers belonging to operator DP World.





