National Data Breach Register (NDBR)
National Data Breach Register (NDBR)
A volunteer initiative by Aristotle Metadata — increasing public awareness of data breaches in Australia and internationally.
ABOUT THE NDBR
The National Data Breach Register (NDBR) is a volunteer project by Aristotle Metadata to increase public awareness of data breaches in Australia and internationally. Through this project, Aristotle will help maintain an updated registry of data breaches, allowing the public to access information on what personal data was lost and any remediation measures taken.
Governance & Oversight
We govern the metadata through our Registration Authority. Review the full governance framework and policies below.
Australian Data Breach Register Governance
- CONTRIBUTE: Add a New Record
- Help grow the public registry by submitting a new data breach dataset. Your contribution supports transparency across Australia.
- Create a dataset → SET TEMPLATE FOR ITEM AND ADD IT HERE
- UPDATE: Edit an Existing Record
- Is information out of date? Help keep the register accurate by updating or correcting existing breach records.
- Edit a record → NOT DONE
BEFORE YOU UPDATE
Please see the governance rules — Endorsement state and definition
All records follow a defined endorsement workflow to ensure accuracy and accountability.
Unapproved edits may be reverted by the governance team pending review.
Ready to contribute?
- You need a free account to create or edit content on the NDBR. Sign-up takes less than a minute.
- Sign up for a free account
⚠️ DISCLAIMER
For educational purposes only. The content published in the National Data Breach Register is intended to increase public awareness and understanding of data breach incidents. It does not constitute legal, financial, security, or professional advice of any kind.
Whilst we take reasonable care when recording and publishing information about data breaches, initial reports may be incomplete, subject to change, or superseded by further investigation. Organisations involved in a reported breach may provide additional context, corrections, or updated findings that differ from information recorded here.
Readers are encouraged to consult primary sources, affected organisations, and relevant regulatory bodies such as the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) for authoritative and up-to-date information.
This register is maintained on a volunteer basis. To report an inaccuracy or request an amendment, please contact the governance team via support@aristotlemetadata.com