Laptops holding 30 years’ worth of applicant data were stolen from the University of Western Australia late last month, the university’s vice-chancellor revealed at the weekend. The laptops – which were taken in a break-in at a UWA administration building – contain the Tax File Numbers and student identification numbers of people who applied to study at the university between 1988 and January 2018. “Separately, and in varying degrees of completeness, there are also details across the laptops from applicants who may have provided the University with information such as names, dates of birth and passport numbers to obtain a confirmation of enrolment,” Vice-Chancellor Professor Dawn Freshwater, said in a message on Saturday. The university was treating the theft “as a data loss incident,” Freshwater added. The incident was immediately reported to the Western Australian Police for investigation, the university said, and the Office of the Australian Information Commissionerand Australian Tax Office have been notified. No credit card details, bank information or medical records were included in the stolen datasets. “Following the theft, and as a precaution, the University has reset user login passwords and made it impossible for the stolen laptops to connect to the UWA network. Police investigations into the break-in are ongoing, and the University is continuing efforts to track the stolen equipment,” Freshwater said. Building and data security has been strengthened “where possible”. Recipients of the alert were advised to be extra vigilant when receiving unsolicited emails, phone calls and text messages and to monitor financial transactions for any suspicious behaviour. Students and alumni were told that there was “no indication that any data has been, or will be, accessed or used”. The incident comes just months after the Australian National University (ANU) detected a breach in which 19 years’ worth of personal staff, student and visitordata had been accessed. The attack by what the university’s Vice-Chancellor Brian Schmidt called a ‘sophisticated operator’ occurred in late 2018 and was detected in May this year. It is believed unauthorised access was gained to a huge amount of data including names, addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, personal email addresses and emergency contact details, tax file numbers, payroll information, bank account details, passport details as well as student academic records. Related content feature 4 remedies to avoid cloud app migration headaches The compelling benefits of using proprietary cloud-native services come at a price: vendor lock-in. Here are ways CIOs can effectively plan without getting stuck. By Robert Mitchell Nov 29, 2023 9 mins CIO Managed Service Providers Managed IT Services case study Steps Gerresheimer takes to transform its IT CIO Zafer Nalbant explains what the medical packaging manufacturer does to modernize its IT through AI, automation, and hybrid cloud. By Jens Dose Nov 29, 2023 6 mins CIO SAP ServiceNow feature Per Scholas redefines IT hiring by diversifying the IT talent pipeline What started as a technology reclamation nonprofit has since transformed into a robust, tuition-free training program that seeks to redefine how companies fill tech skills gaps with rising talent. By Sarah K. White Nov 29, 2023 11 mins Diversity and Inclusion Hiring news Saudi Arabia will host the World Expo in 2030 in Riyadh By Andrea Benito Nov 28, 2023 3 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe