In this type of breach and, like many others, is that companies provide access 
to the entire consumer data without any consideration of the consumer who is 
having their data being accessed.

The current model(s) need to change and are changing to be more consumer 
centric.

Preventing 3rd party companies' direct access to consumer data without consumer 
consent is what needs to be put in place now to remove such egregious breaches 
from occurring in the future.

Allowing the consumer to decide who has access to their data and what data they 
want is the model that should be taken.

This limits the scope of an attack down to a single consumer as the data 
passing between "company to company where the source company is the data 
holder" or "company to company via the consumer where the consumer is the data 
holder" is only specific to that consumer not entire data set. If an attacker 
manages to gain access to that data in-transit, then it will be limited to the 
scope of that consumer, the risk can be mitigated and the cost to access large 
swathes of consumer data will be so high that it will be not cost effective for 
the hacker.

It is only a matter of time until companies will need to pivot to facilitate 
this change.

So why not start working towards making this happen before you are forced to.



Regards,

Mark Stewart

M:      0438005415<tel:0438005415>
E:      [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
W:      www.nabc.com.au<https://nabc.com.au/>

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From: AusNOG <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Bevan Slattery
Sent: Tuesday, 27 September 2022 8:46 AM
To: ausnog <[email protected]>
Subject: DMARC Violation[AusNOG] Optus Hack

Hi everyone,

Obviously a big week in telco and cybersecurity.  As part of my work I am on 
the Australian Cyber Security Industry Advisory Committee as an industry 
representative.

I am keen to look at opening up a dialogue with more and more telco, DC and 
Cloud CISO's on what they are doing around this issue and looking to take a 
proactive step towards best practice on customer data and system security.

There will be some pretty serious consequences of this hack on the industry and 
importantly we need to make sure we are as best placed to help each other 
continually increase in security posture through best practice, but also 
working with each other as an industry.

Are people keen on having a online/VC session sometime in the next few weeks 
where like-minded industry participants get together and discuss security, 
retention, encryption, threat detection etc.?  If so, just ping me directly and 
if there is enough interest I will send out an invitation to the list for a 
call.

Cheers

[b]

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