The personal information of thousands of Sunshine Coast state-school students has been compromised in a massive global data breach.
Queensland Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek on Thursday confirmed there had been a “cybersecurity incident” involving Instructure, the third-party provider that delivers the Department of Education’s QLearn platform.
The breach has hit thousands of educational institutions, including state schools and universities in Queensland, across Australia and overseas, and more than 9000 institutions globally. It is estimated around 200 million people globally will be impacted.
“Early advice is students and staff working or studying at Education Queensland schools since 2020, when the former government introduced the online system, have been affected,” Mr Langbroek said in a statement.
At this stage, names, email addresses and school locations are believed to have been compromised.
“There is no evidence of passwords, dates of birth or financial information being accessed in the data breach,” Mr Langbroek said.
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School principals are contacting families and teachers to advise them of the incident.
The department is providing priority support to families and teachers with known family and domestic violence concerns, or those known to Child Safety.
The Department of Education would continue to update Queenslanders as further information became available, Mr Langbroek said.
The concerns in Queensland come after the University of Technology Sydney said Canvas –a learning management system used by several Australian universities that’s supplied by Instructure – was impacted globally by a “cyber incident” .
Canvas is widely used to deliver and manage learning for students and staff.




