A significant data breach has exposed the private information of more than 1,200 Baw Baw Shire residents who contacted customer service after-hours over a nearly two-year period, the Baw Baw Shire council revealed. The breach occurred at OracleCMS, a third-party call center contracted by the council to field inquiries outside normal business hours. It reportedly does not impact the council’s own systems and databases.
The exposed information includes customer contact details and call notes—dates from June 2014 to January 2016 when customers rang the council hotline during evenings, weekends and holidays. Calls made during the specified period had been automatically forwarded to OracleCMS call agents. It remains unclear precisely how the contractor failed to protect confidential constituent information or when the company first discovered the breach.
Upon learning of the breach earlier this month, Baw Baw officials urgently contacted every affected resident—over 1,250 in total—through SMS messages and personal calls to vulnerable groups like the elderly. While the breach did not infiltrate Baw Baw’s systems directly with the council’s own systems, it represents an alarming security gap by a third-party vendor given access to constituents’ sensitive information.
Authorities are currently investigating the incident, which may have also impacted other clients of the Australia-based company. OracleCMS provides outsourced contact center services for an array of local governments and organizations. OracleCMS had previously been implicated in a long list of data breaches affecting several different cities in Australia. As cyberattacks surge, some have questioned whether outsourcing critical customer service channels renders individuals and businesses more vulnerable to data theft. The incident serves as reminder for governments and organizations to lock down vulnerabilities present in third-party vendors or tools while conducting regular security audits.