- In early June 2025, Cantas faced Cybertrick
- A complete investigation has now placed the number of affected people 5.7 million
- Passwords and payment data is secure, but bullying took names, addresses and other PII
Qantas has confirmed that in the recent cybertack it eliminated sensitive information about 5.7 million users.
Australia’s largest airline said he recently intervened after a dangerous actor targeting the call center and accessing the third party’s customer serving platform. Initially, it was claimed that six million people were affected, now the cantas have come forward with more exact personalities.
In a press release published on the company’s website, it states that the attackers have taken details of four million customers’ names, email addresses, and repeated flights of Kantas. For the remaining 1.7 million, they also stole postal addresses, date birth, phone numbers, gender and food preferences.
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Spider scattered
Cantas confirmed that credit card details, personal financial information, passport details, as well as passport details, as well as passwords, pins and other login details were not compromised, as the data did not even have the company.
It states that it has begun notifying the affected users about the violation, and urged them to be vigilant and independently confirm the identity of the unmanageable callers.
The company did not say who was the danger actor, or if he tried to deploy a rhenomware.
However, there are many similarities with other recent attacks by the recently scattered spider, which is known to target large US companies using social engineering and SIM swiping techniques.
The group has not yet claimed responsibility for the attack – but in recent weeks, several reports have come to the forefront of cybratics due to airlines being targeted by airlines, airline airlines have confirmed the attack and recently faced both West Jet and Globals. Even the FBI issued a consultation, and warned US companies about the spiders’ activities.
At press time, there was no evidence that the stolen data was released to the wild. Nevertheless, Cantas said it was “actively monitoring” the web with the help of specialist cyber -scoring experts.


