ON
← Torna al feed
Privacy Commissioner ordered to hand over report on Amex security failures
Australia🏛️ Political’altro ieri

Privacy Commissioner ordered to hand over report on Amex security failures

The Australian Parliament has ordered the Privacy Commissioner to release a secret report on American Express's (AmEx) security failures, which were investigated by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC). Greens senator David Shoebridge introduced a motion in the Senate to compel the OAIC to disclose the full report, arguing that AmEx had used gag orders and legal threats to keep the findings confidential. The motion passed with bipartisan support, giving the OAIC until July 28 to release the full report and related internal communications. The investigation, which began in 2023, found that AmEx failed to track employee access to 78% of its systems, exposing millions of customers to 'insider threat' risks. Cybersecurity experts have emphasized the importance of monitoring employee access to prevent data breaches. While the Privacy Commissioner, Carly Kind, ruled that AmEx breached privacy laws, she chose to publish only a summary of the findings and warned against public disclosure of the full report.

Vai alle fonti primarie (2)

Le fonti ufficiali su cui si basa la copertura. Leggile direttamente per aggirare il framing.

1 servizi

ABC News (Australia) logoABC News (Australia)Statale / pubblicoSinistral’altro ieri
Privacy Commissioner ordered to hand over report on Amex security failures

The Australian Parliament has ordered the Privacy Commissioner to release a secret report on American Express's (AmEx) security failures, which were investigated by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC). Greens senator David Shoebridge introduced a motion in the Senate to compel the OAIC to disclose the full report, arguing that AmEx had used gag orders and legal threats to keep the findings confidential. The motion passed with bipartisan support, giving the OAIC until July 28 to release the full report and related internal communications. The investigation, which began in 2023, found that AmEx failed to track employee access to 78% of its systems, exposing millions of customers to 'insider threat' risks. Cybersecurity experts have emphasized the importance of monitoring employee access to prevent data breaches. While the Privacy Commissioner, Carly Kind, ruled that AmEx breached privacy laws, she chose to publish only a summary of the findings and warned against public disclosure of the full report.

Lettura del bias (Sinistra): The article frames the issue as a struggle for transparency and accountability, emphasizing the role of parliamentary oversight and criticism of AmEx's attempts to suppress the report. It highlights the involvement of the Greens senator and the bipartisan support for the motion, suggesting a left-of

Manteniamo le notizie oneste.

ObjectiveNews è finanziato dai lettori e senza pubblicità: ti mostriamo il bias invece di nasconderlo. Sostieni il giornalismo indipendente per 5 €/mese.

Diventa sostenitore

Storie correlate