I have an account with these clowns. Unique password of course.
Thanks password managers! 😘
I don’t, but I have been caught up in a couple of others. Thankfully I didn’t get caught in the Optus one (I think)
I had an old account that I hadn’t used for years in the Optus one.
Of course, it turns out they gave that information away to the hackers too.
I signed up for an Optus Sim when I was 12, so I didn’t have any ID or anything like that, but there was a period of time where they allowed you to use a PayPal account as proof of ID. I was able to bullshit my way through the PayPal (and Optus) sign ups and they just never questioned it. So thankfully they didn’t leak my ID. They did have my actual name and address though (and phone number and email I guess), but that’d not too bad compared to how bad it would’ve been if they’d leaked my license or something
I’d also stopped using that number and had moved so it’s only my email and name I care about being released. But I already get a ton of spam to that email anyways so it doesn’t matter that much.
Unique password of course.
Passwords didn’t leak - so that’s not helping you in this case.
What name/email/phone/credit card/home address/etc did you give them? Because that’s what leaked.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Industry publication CyberDaily reported that the personal details of 560 million Ticketmaster customers may have been leaked in a data breach claimed by a notorious hacker group ShinyHunters.
A spokesperson from the Department of Home Affairs told the ABC it is “Working with Ticketmaster to understand the incident”.
Cybersecurity expert and director of several IT companies Mark Lukie said the hack will have have major implications for Australian customers.
In September last year, 193,000 Pizza Hut customers’ data was leaked when ShinyHunters allegedly accessed their personal information.
Reports of the hacking come a week after LiveNation, which owns Ticketmaster, was sued by the US Department of Justice over claims it is running an illegal live event “monopoly”.
The DOJ alleged the ticketing giant’s monopoly on the market was driving up prices for fans and pushing out smaller competition.
The original article contains 447 words, the summary contains 138 words. Saved 69%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!