SYDNEY (Reuters) – More than 100,000 current and former customers have joined a class action lawsuit against Australian telecommunications giant Optus over a cybersecurity breach last year that compromised roughly 1.2 million customers, lawyers said on Friday.
Starting with the Optus breach in September, a spate of cyber attacks on Australia’s corporate sector has exposed data from tens of millions of customers online and led the government to set up a new cyber security body and overhaul rules the home minister has called “bloody useless”.
A claim lodged in the federal court by Slater and Gordon on Friday alleged Optus breached laws and its own policies by failing to adequately protect customer data and destroy or de-identify former customer data, according to a release from the firm.
Optus will defend itself in the class action, said a spokesperson in an emailed statement.
Members want compensation for the time and money required to replace identify documents and for distress, frustration and disappointment caused by the breach. The release did not specify an amount.
Claimants include a stalking victim who fears her life has been put in danger, the release said. Slater and Gordon Class Actions Practice Group Leader Ben Hardwick said the breach had potentially put vulnerable customers at risk of domestic violence and other crimes.
“Very real risks were created by the disclosure of this private information that Optus customers had every right to believe was securely protected by their telecommunications and internet provider,” Mr Hardwick said.
(Reporting by Lewis Jackson; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)