Cybersecurity experts sharpened their own knives. Alastair MacGibbon,a former head of the government’s Australian Cyber Security Centre,said Optus’ crisis management was poor and had made things worse.
Medibank – the victim of an even worse hack,which has exposed details as personal as whether someone has battled with drugs – by contrast has got the full Team Australia treatment. O’Neil,a master of strategically deployed invective,has likened the hackers to “dogs”,“scum of the earth”,the lowest of the low.
But she hasn’t said a bad word about Medibank despite the company’s drip-feed of updates,each confirming the hack was worse than believed in the previous update. What started with Medibank saying there was “no evidence” customer data had even been accessed is now,two weeks later,a crisisengulfing all Medibank’s 4 million customers, and perhaps close to that number again in former members.
One might hope Medibank would clarify that figure,but the reality is it doesn’t know the full scale of the breach. That is the crux of the critics’ complaints:rather than Medibank stressing early on what it did not know,it emphasised there was no evidence that the worst case had occurred. It was not a lie,but a little like being told your warehouse locks had been broken and declaring all looked well without checking the pawnshop down the road.
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In the beginning,it appears O’Neil had no more idea of the hack’s full extent than the rest of us. Opposition cybersecurity spokesman James Paterson used parliament to get an answer from the government on Wednesday that suggests O’Neil first personally spoke to Medibank on or after October 19,seven days after the hack was first detected,though it had been briefing her office. But even when the full scale became increasingly obvious,with revelations such as the use of a username and password granting “high-level access” to Medibank’s systems,O’Neil did not attack the company.