February 27, 2019
Following hot on the heals of the ransomware attach on the Melbourne Heart Group last week the Fairfax Press reports on 3 separate attacks, being the Catholic Archdiocese, TelstraSuper and Toyota with varying degrees of success.
While the targets are high profile here, which makes for interesting the reality is that ransomware attacks are becoming Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in General
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February 21, 2019
In C Tina Pty Ltd v Warners Electroplating Pty Ltd [2019] VSC 66 Associate Justice Gardiner set aside a statutory demand.
FACTS
On 1 October 2018, the defendant (‘Warners’) served on the plaintiff (‘C Tina’):
- a creditors statutory demand for payment of debt; and
- an affidavit in support sworn by Grant Warner on 26 September 2018 [1].
The Demand related to two invoices totalling $166,332.10 for work and labour done and materials supplied [2].
On 19 October 2018, C Tina made application by originating process to set aside the Demand [3].
The application is based on the ground that C Tina has a genuine dispute in relation to the debt in that it never contracted with Warners and that Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Insolvency, Supreme Court of Victoria
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The Fairfax press reports in Crime syndicate hacks 15,000 medical files at Cabrini Hospital, demands ransom that the Melbourne Heart Group, specialists who lease rooms at the Cabrini Hospital has suffered what is almost certainly a ransomware attack.
Ransomware attacks are particularly prevalent in the health care industry. The impact of an attack is immediate and serious if not catastrophic and the need to remedy it, by paying the ransom, urgent. Health data is particularly sensitive. In early February an optometry clinic in Connecticut was hit impacting 23,578 patient records, In Jacksonvill Florida a Obstetrics and Gynecology practice suffered a data breach involving ransomware in early January while a health center in Rhode Island was hit by a ransomware attack in early December last year. In November hospitals in Ohio and Ireland were hit by ransomware attacks. And the list goes on and on and on.
Ransomware attacks are maturing and becoming more, not less effective. The average ransom in the US has increased by 13% in the last quarter of last year over the previous quarter from $5,973 to $6,733.
That a specialist cardiology unit at Cabrini could be so compromised by the attack indicates that there was either no or inadequate back up of the health records in that unit. If the records were Read the rest of this entry »
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February 20, 2019
There has been no shortage of breathless and generally meaningless articles about the Government’s statement that political parties and the Australian Parliament have been the subject of state sponsored cyber attacks. The Government boffins have come out with statements both highlighting the risk and claiming everything is under control. It has given rise to ponderous commentary about attacks on democracy and then spins out to truly odd dystopian pieces as Peter Hartcher did with Farewell tech utopia: how governments are readying the web for war which swallows the twaddle about the internet being balkanised and ruined.
The reality is that cyber attacks by state players, mainly Russia, China and North Korea have been a regular occurrence for a decade. Then there are the plethora of non state hackers in India, the various Stans and Africa who sometimes are engaged by instruments of state to create mischief. It is a feature of life in the age of the internet.
Rather than reading the Henny Penny the sky is falling reportage and the end of innocence blather the best article to get an understanding of what is going on and why is the ABC piece Cyber attacks by foreign governments, malicious companies and enterprising hackers are on the rise. And the biggest problem is you. It sets out in plain undramatic terms that most cyber attacks succeed because someone in an organisation or government agency is fooled by an email containing malware. And, as the article makes clear, that problem is one of Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Privacy
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February 19, 2019
The Guardian with Revenge porn: nearly one in 10 adults admit to taking nude images without consent and the Canberra Times in One in 10 Australians have perpetrated ‘image-based abuse’ have reported on research by RMIT and Monash University in Image-based sexual abuse: The extent, nature, and predictors of perpetration in a community sample of Australian residents which found that 10% of adults have engaged in this problematical (and in many jurisdictions is criminal) conduct.
The stories are not a product of detailed analysis but a pick up of the media release by the RMIT on Monday, 18 February 2019 which Read the rest of this entry »
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David Crowe, one of the more energetic commentators at the Fairfax Press has put together a piece about the ridiculous exemption that political parties have from regulation of the Privacy Act 1988 in Political parties should be stripped of Privacy Act exemptions after hack: experts. It is one of those topics that columnists dust off from time to time. Peter Van Onselen has repeatedly drawn from that well though pretty much saying the same thing again and again and again in an Australian article in Political parties violate our rights to privacy on 23 July 2011, raising the issue Read the rest of this entry »
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February 14, 2019
Judicial Registrar considered an application to wind up a company when administrators had been appointed shortly before the hearing In the matter of Polar Agencies Pty Ltd [2019] VSC 43.
FACTS
The plaintiff a statutory demand served on the defendant by the plaintiff by post sent on 18 October 2018 [4]. The demand is in respect of debts totalling $558,508.56 for goods supplied by the plaintiff to the defendant and invoiced in the period March to August 2018. The defendant failed to comply with it [4] and made no application to set aside the statutory demand [5] thereby failing to comply with the demand in about midNovember 2018 which gave rise to a statutory presumption of insolvency under s 459C(2)(a) of the Corporations Act (the Act).
By an originating process filed on 16 November 2018 [3] the plaintiff applied for the defendant be wound up in insolvency pursuant to s 459P and s 459Q of the Act [1].
The proceeding first came on for hearing on 19 December 2018 where:
- the plaintiff appeared and the defendant did not.
- the Court was informed that negotiations were underway. Directions were made that any request for a further adjournment was to be supported by an affidavit to be filed and served by 4 February 2019,
- the hearing was adjourned to 6 February 2019 [6].
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Insolvency, Supreme Court of Victoria
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February 12, 2019
Yesterday, Rod Sims in a speech to the IIC Australian Chapter highlighted the issues that the ACCC raised in its Preliminary report on the Digital Platforms Inquiry. The final submissions close on 15 February 2019.
As with the Preliminary Report Sims highlights the privacy issues that are associated with the current regime of data collection, the matching and lack of consent. These are matters that should of primary concern to Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Privacy
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The Information has published its Notifiable Data Breaches Quarterly Statistics Report for the last quarter of 2018.
The media release provides:
The
latest quarterly report from the Office of the Australian Information
Commissioner (OAIC) shows 262 data breaches involving personal
information were notified between October and December 2018.
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Posted in Commonwealth Privacy Commissioner, Privacy
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