Cyber Daily reported that Black Shrantac claimed to have taken 800GB of data and said it would publish the material “soon.” The group has already posted sample files said to include internal records relating to staff, tax, equipment, and customers, with alleged names, contact details, bank information, contract terms, and insurance-related information. Netstar Australia has been contacted by media outlets for comment, but no detailed public statement had been reported at the time of writing. For insurers, the incident illustrates potential aggregation risk when a technology vendor with multiple business clients is compromised, with possible implications for privacy notifications, contractual liabilities, business interruption, and cyber policy response for both the provider and its customers.