Home
FacebookSearchMenu
  • Subscribe (free)
  • Subscribe (free)
  • News
  • Features
  • TravelInfo
  • Columns
  • Community
  • Sponsored
  • Contact Us
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send Us News

Share

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

Qantas the latest victim in airline cyberattacks

06 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

On June 30, Qantas reported a cyber incident at one of its contact centres, which compromised customer data.

“We detected unusual activity on a third-party platform used by a Qantas airline contact centre. We then took immediate steps and contained the incident. We can confirm all Qantas systems remain secure,” the airline said in a statement. The airline is investigating the proportion of data that was stolen but expects it to be significant. BBC is reporting that up to six million customer profiles could be affected.

An initial review confirmed customers’ names, email addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth and frequent flyer numbers were compromised. Credit card details, personal financial information and passport details are not held in this system and were not affected. Frequent flyer accounts, passwords, PIN numbers, or log in details were also not accessed.

This incident follows a recent wave of airline cyber security breaches over the last few months.

On June 28, the FBI issued an alert warning of a cybercriminal group known as Scattered Spider targeting the airline sector. The FBI said the group impersonated employees or contractors to deceive IT help desks into granting access to systems. They target large corporations and their IT providers, which means the airline industry could be at risk.

The alert was issued a day after Hawaiian Airlines reported a cybersecurity event that impacted some of its IT systems. The airline did not provide details on which systems were attacked but said flights had not been impacted.

According to Travel Weekly, Canada's WestJet was also affected by a cybersecurity breach last month. The attack affected internal systems as well as its app and website.

In South Africa, SAA had also reported a cyber-breach in May that disrupted access to the airline’s website, mobile app and several internal operational systems. The airline confirmed that customer data was not compromised.

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.

Exorbitant taxes clip African airlines' wings

Yesterday
Comments | 0

Proflight expands seasonal schedule

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Hong Kong to increase visa fees

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

2026 opening for ultra-luxury V&A Waterfront hotel

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Feature: Leisure clients seek meaning in their travel experiences

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Spain orders Booking.com to remove listings

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

IATA: ‘uneven’ air pax growth for May

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Train travel round-up

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

Latest Changes on Travelinfo (01Jul'25)

01 Jul 2025
Comments | 0

TMCs must drive NDC education efforts

30 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Ethiopian resumes Tel Aviv flights

30 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Last chance to book your spot at Thirstys!

30 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

SAA and Uganda Airlines expand interline agreement

30 Jun 2025
Comments | 0
  • Load more

FeatureClick to view

New products July 2025

Poll

I don't sell cruises because...
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Travel News on Facebook
  • eTNW Twitter
  • Travel News RSS
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send Us News