Fri, 12 Jun 2026
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Hackers leak major Australian health company records on dark web
Published on: Thursday, November 10, 2022
Published on: Thu, Nov 10, 2022
By: AFP
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Hackers leak major Australian health company records on dark web
SYDNEY: Hackers have followed through on a threat to leak sensitive medical records stolen from a major Australian health company that counts the country’s prime minister among nearly 10 million customers (pic).

Medibank told investors that a “sample” selection of customer data was posted on a “dark web forum” on Wednesday after it refused to pay a ransom demand.

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The data included names, birth dates, passport numbers and information on medical claims for hundreds of customers who were separated into “naughty” and “nice” lists.

Some on the “naughty” list had numeric codes that appeared to link them to drug addiction, alcohol abuse and HIV infection.

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For example, one record carried an entry that read: “p_diag: F122”.

F122 corresponds with “cannabis dependence” under the International Classification of Diseases, published by the World Health Organization.

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Medibank is Australia’s largest private health insurer and the hack is likely to include some of the country’s most influential and wealthy individuals.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he himself was a Medibank customer and that the attack was a “wake-up call” for corporate Australia.

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The perpetrator of the hack has not yet been publicly identified.

But the Australian Federal Police’s Justine Gough said it was the work of a “criminal or criminal groups” that could be operating outside the country.

Sanjay Jha, chief scientist at the University of New South Wales’s Institute for Cyber Security, said it was difficult to attribute any attack to a single group.

However, he told AFP it carried some of the hallmarks associated with a Russian hacker group called REvil—which has previously targeted everything from Brazilian meat company JBS to Lady Gaga.

A defunct REvil website has been redirecting traffic to the dark web forum where the Medibank data was leaked.

REvil—an amalgam of ransomware and evil—was the subject of a US$10 million reward from US authorities before being reportedly dismantled by Russia this year.

JBS Foods, one of the largest beef producers in the world, paid REvil a ransom of US$11 million in 2021.

Jha said the hackers could now look to sell the sensitive data to blackmailers and other scammers.

The hackers also uploaded what they said were a series of messages sent to Medibank in the days before the leak.

“We will do everything in our power to inflict as much damage as possible for you, both financial and reputational,” one message from the hackers read.

Hundreds of millions of US dollars have been wiped off Medibank’s market value, with the company’s share price down more than 20 percent since October, when news of the leak first emerged.

Troy Hunt, a cyber security expert working for Microsoft, wrote on Twitter that the breach was “about as bad as we feared it would get”.

The Medibank hack followed an attack on telecom company Optus in September that exposed the personal information of some nine million Australians.
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