Incidents and Controversies
At 8:00am on 16 July 2008 a wide-ranging outage affected customers in Queensland and Northern NSW. Customers of Optus, iiNet, 3 Mobile and Virgin were reported as down. Examples of services affected included Brisbane Airport, public transport, hospitals, landlines, ATM's and EFTPOS. The fault occurred as a result of a fibre optic cable at Molendinar being severed by earthworks, and the inland fibre path via Stanthorpe had failed the night prior. Partial restoration of services occurred at 12:30pm. [66] The same cited article also mentions brief detail of 1,800 ADSL and DSL services experiencing an outage in January of the same year due to the carrier's Moorooka exchange.
In 2014 Telstra successfully argued an Optus TV campaign was misleading about its coverage.[67]
During the 2018 FIFA World Cup, its Optus Sport streaming service suffered widespread outages that left subscribers unable to view matches; chief executive Allen Lew apologised, temporary simulcasts were arranged with SBS, and subscriptions were made free with refunds offered to affected customers.[68]
In April 2018, Optus removed and investigated a Neutral Bay retail job ad that improperly expressed a preference for "Anglo-Saxon" applicants.[69]
In February 2019, the Federal Court imposed a $10million penalty after Optus admitted misleading customers charged via its Direct Carrier Billing service for unwanted digital content, with hundreds of thousands refunded.[70]
In September 2025, Optus paid a $100million penalty in response to a court order that it had engaged in "unconscionable conduct" by recommending products that customers could not afford, did not want or could not use. Such customers were unemployed, homeless, had a disability or did not speak English as their first language. First Nations people from regional areas were also targeted.[71]
2022 cyberattack
Around 22 September 2022, Optus systems sustained a significant cyberattack that resulted in a major data breach of both current and former customers' personal information, including customers' names, dates of birth, phone numbers and email addresses, with a smaller subset of customers having their street addresses, driving licence details and passport numbers leaked. Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin urged customers to exercise "heightened awareness" regarding transactions with their Optus and other accounts. Rosmarin emphasised that passwords were not compromised.[72][73] The CEO said that the "worst-case scenario" regarding the number of customers whose data had been leaked was 9.8 million customers, but believes the actual number to be far lower.[74]
On 24 September 2022, Australian news outlets The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Optus was investigating the authenticity of a ransom demand of US$1million made on a hacking forum. The demand gave Optus one week to pay the ransom in cryptocurrency else the data will be sold for US$300,000 to whoever else wants it.