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Australia news live: ongoing hacking incident ‘intended to harm’ Western Sydney University, vice chancellor says | Australia news

Caitlin Cassidy

Ongoing cyber hacking incident ‘intended to harm’ Western Sydney University, vice chancellor says

A swathe of personal information including bank account details, tax file numbers, legal and visa details have allegedly been leaked in a major data breach “intended to harm” Western Sydney University (WSU).

WSU first notified its community about an alleged data breach in April, which dated back to the beginning of January. The university believed around 10,000 people were impacted.

Western Sydney University's Parramatta campus
Photograph: Carly Earl/The Guardian

The vice chancellor of WSU, Prof George Williams, apologised for the impact the cyber incident was having and said the university was doing “everything we can to rectify this issue and support our community”.

Williams said NSW Police had on Thursday approved the release of personal information that had allegedly been accessed and exfiltrated. He also alleged fraudulent emails were sent to some community members on 6 October which used stolen data.

The stolen information included contact details, employment and payroll details, bank account information, tax file number, visa information and legal information, among others.

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Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor

Estimated 50,000 older Samsung devices to be blocked from mobile networks in a month

It is estimated about 50,000 older Samsung devices will be blocked from being able to connect to mobile networks in Australia, after Telstra and Optus yesterday advised the devices weren’t able to connect to Vodafone’s network in the event that both of their networks are unavailable and a user needs to call triple zero.

Photograph: James Ross/AAP

Under federal legislation, devices that in some circumstances cannot connect to triple zero need to be cut off from mobile networks. Customers will be advised if they need to upgrade their phones, and their existing devices will be cut off from the networks in the next 28 to 35 days.

The device models are:

  • Galaxy A7 (2017)

  • Galaxy A5 2017

  • Galaxy J1 2016

  • Galaxy J3 2016

  • Galaxy J5 2017

  • Galaxy Note 5

  • Galaxy S6

  • Galaxy S6 edge

  • Galaxy S6 Edge+

  • Galaxy S7

  • Galaxy S7 Edge

Newer Samsung devices may need a software update in order to continue operating. Telstra has provided a list of those devices on its website.

The shadow communications minister, Melissa McIntosh, has blamed the government’s handling of the 3G network shutdown last year, which led to some devices being forced off the networks if they couldn’t make triple zero calls over 4G on any network.

In a statement, Samsung said it was working with Australian carriers on the issue. A spokesperson for Vodafone said Telstra had advised it about the issue, which they described as “not a fault of the Vodafone network, but a limitation in how certain devices were originally configured to search for emergency connectivity”. The network has also identified users with Samsung devices on its network that are affected.

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