New government app to sound alert if criminals are using your private information

A new smartphone app will alert Australians in real time if an identity thief tries to use their personal data to commit fraud.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus has announced an $11 million budget commitment for an online register that informs people if their data is being used to steal money or fake an identity.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus.Alex Ellinghausen

The Credential Protection Register was set up after thehigh-profile 2022 Optus data breach,allowing exposed Optus customers to check if their personal credentials were being used maliciously. The government says it has blocked 300,000 hacking attempts.

Now Labor is expanding the program to allow the broader community,including those who have never been caught up in a data breach,to proactively check if their details have been compromised via the app.

“The register enables people who have had their personal details stolen to quickly lock down their information to prevent their data being used for identity crime and theft,” Dreyfus said in a statement.

“This in turn disrupts black market sales of stolen personal documents and illegal activities that rely on those stolen credentials including scams,money laundering and fraud.

Qantas says it has resolved an issue that allowed users the ability to see other passengers' details,including boarding passes,on their phones.

“The mobile application will allow an individual to be notified,in real time,if someone is using their identity without their consent.”

The app,which is scheduled to be operational by the end of the year,would allow individuals to know in real time if someone has used their passport to update their details at the Australian Taxation Office,for example. In this situation,the individual could immediately act to counter the fraud.

The existing register has prevented attempts at fraud,including someone using a compromised passport to try to create a myGov account,and a bid to establish new phone plans using a compromised driver’s licence.

The government is confident the register itself will not be susceptible to hacking attempts because it says the tool does not act as a database and stores no personal information.

In a speech on Friday nighthighlighting the government’s looming privacy reforms,Dreyfus said both in Australia and abroad the “privacy of citizens is under attack”.

“We live in a world where data breaches and cyberattacks are now all too commonplace,and where cybercriminals and nefarious state actors seek out our personal information for financial gain or global strategic advantage,” he said.

“The global economy relies on data and personal information. We are all constantly producing valuable personal information as we go about our daily lives.

“Just about all of us are online,nearly all of the time,but in return for this Australians are increasingly being asked to share their personal information in online transactions. And they expect that when they do,their information will be protected and that they will maintain control over it.”

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Paul Sakkal is federal political correspondent for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald who previously covered Victorian politics and has won two Walkley awards.

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