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Australia’s biggest data breach sees 1.3m records leaked

Posted on October 27, 2016 by Dissent

Allie Coyne reports:

More than one million personal and medical records of Australian citizens donating blood to the Red Cross Blood Service have been exposed online in the country’s biggest and most damaging data breach to date.

A 1.74 GB file containing 1.28 million donor records going back to 2010, published to a publicly-facing website, was discovered by an anonymous source and sent to security expert and operator of haveibeenpwned.com Troy Hunt early on Tuesday morning.

The database was uncovered through a scan of IP address ranges configured to search for publicly exposed web servers that returned directory listings containing .sql files.

Read more on ITNews.com.au.

See the Red Cross’s statement and FAQ here.


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Category: ExposureHealth DataMiscellaneousNon-U.S.Of NoteSubcontractor

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