World

Hackers demand US$10 mil for stolen Australian health records

Medibank has earlier confirmed data leak of 9.7 mil current, former patients

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 10 Nov 2022 10:30AM

Hackers demand US$10 mil for stolen Australian health records
Hackers leaking medical records stolen from major Australian healthcare company Medibank are demanding US$10 million to make it stop. – AFP pic, November 10, 2022

SYDNEY – Hackers leaking medical records stolen from a major Australian healthcare company said today they are demanding US$10 million (RM45 million) to make it stop, about a dollar for each of their potential victims.

Medibank earlier this week confirmed the hackers had accessed information belonging to 9.7 million current and former clients, including Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

A small sample of records posted by the hackers early yesterday featured a “naughty list” of names that appeared to have undergone treatment for drug addiction, alcohol abuse and HIV.

Medibank today confirmed an “additional file” believed to contain customer data was uploaded to a “dark web” forum overnight.

The hackers used the same forum to detail their ransom demand.

“Society asks us about ransom, it’s US$10 million,” the anonymous hackers posted on the forum.

“We can make discount... US$1 for every customer.”

Medibank has repeatedly refused to pay the hackers.

“The release of this stolen data on the dark web is disgraceful,” chief executive David Koczkar said today.

“The weaponisation of people’s private information in an effort to extort payment is malicious and it is an attack on the most vulnerable members of our community”.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil has described the hackers as “scummy criminals”.

“I cannot articulate the disgust I have for the scumbags who are at the heart of this criminal act,” she told Parliament yesterday.

Medibank is Australia’s largest private health insurer and the hack is likely to include some of the country’s most influential and wealthy individuals.

The hackers had previously threatened to sell the data of 1,000 high-profile Australians if the company did not pay an undisclosed ransom.

The “sample” selection of customer data posted to the dark web yesterday included names, birth dates, passport numbers and information on medical claims for hundreds of customers. – AFP, November 10, 2022

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