INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
almost 20 million accounts) in May 2016, the Australian financial giant has released a statement in its defence.The data took the form of
bank statements spanning the years 2000-2016 and was stored on two magnetic tapes that were due to be destroyed by a third-party contractor,
numbers, they did contain their names, addresses, account numbers and transaction details.It's fine, thoughCBA has now released a statement
allegedly returned no signs of malicious activity over the last two years.CBA notified the appropriate regulators of the potential breach
individuals if they were deemed at risk.While CBA did notify the regulators (in this case, the Office of the Australian Information
Commission and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority), they chose not to disclose the breach to customers as they were deemed
the names, addresses, and detailed finances of 12 million customers are misplaced