Tens of thousands of patients from Australia’s biggest medical imaging provider I-MED have had swaths of sensitive health and personal information exposed in a data breach using details that have been public for a year.
This information includes medical reports, scan images, names, addresses and other details that were stored in I-MED’s internal systems, which were accessed by a third party. On Thursday, the company provided a statement confirming the breach.
Read more…
Source: Crikey News
Related:
- From today, America and UK follow new rules on how they can demand your data from each other
October 3, 2022
The Data Access Agreement (DAA), by which the US and UK have agreed how one country can respond to lawful data demands from police and investigators in the other, took effect on Monday. The DAA (aka the Access to Electronic Data for the Purpose of Countering Serious Crime) is intended to facilitate cross-border law enforcement within ...
- Singapore firms see 54 cybersecurity incidents daily, struggle to keep up
September 29, 2022
The cybersecurity threat landscape is evolving so quickly companies in Singapore are finding it tough to keep up. Half feel “inundated” by an endless stream of cyber attacks, describing this as one of their biggest work frustrations. Just 25% of cybersecurity professionals in Singapore felt “very confident” in their organisation’s ability to adapt to new threats, ...
- Australia asks FBI to help find attacker who stole data from millions of users
September 28, 2022
Australian authorities have asked the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to assist with investigations into the data breach at local telco Optus. Attorney general Mark Dreyfus yesterday revealed the FBI was asked to help identify the entities involved in the attack, which saw Optus leak data describing over ten million account holders. Data suspected ...
- Meet Pedro, the police dog sniffing out Canberra’s cybercrime
September 17, 2022
Hold your smartphone up to your nose and take a deep sniff. That’s what Pedro can smell too. Pedro is a technology detector dog for the National Canine Operations unit of the Australian Federal Police (AFP). He and his four-legged peers are tasked with sniffing out laptops, phones, USB sticks and other electronic devices for criminal ...
- China-linked APT40 gang targets wind farms, Australian government
August 31, 2022
Researchers at security company Proofpoint and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) said on Tuesday they had identified a cyber espionage campaign that delivers the ScanBox exploitation framework through a malicious fake Australian news site. The campaign, active from April to June of this year, targeted Australian government agencies, Australian media companies and manufacturers who conduct maintenance on wind turbine ...
- Switching side jobs: Links between ATMZOW JS-sniffer and Hancitor
August 17, 2022
The hacker group ATMZOW and its JavaScript-sniffer became known in 2020, thanks to the Malwarebytes researchers, when the group installed a JS sniffer on a website that was collecting donations for victims of the Australia bushfires. However, based on a specific obfuscation technique used by the group, we can track its activities back to 2015 as ...

