Optus outage compensation hint as Aussies expose losses

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Optus has hinted at rewarding customer “loyalty” after a 14-hour outage brought its services and much of Australia to a grinding halt, opening the door for potential compensation as mystery still surrounds the “root cause”.

Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin spent much of yesterday apologising for the chaos a “technical fault” caused when 10 million Australians, 400,000 businesses – including Commonwealth Bank, Westpac and ANZ – and much of the wider population felt the impact of mobile and broadband services going down.

There’s been financial hits for Aussies who lost a day’s work, for business owners who couldn’t take payments, and general inconvenience as people couldn’t make calls, use public transport or access key call centres. But far more concerning impacts like people in life or death situations not being able to contact Triple-0 and hospitals being cut off from communication are more likely to be the subject of a federal government review into the blackout.

Want Optus compensation? To find out more about your rights, check out our explainer here.

Optus outage SOS sign with an Optus window display inset with a phone message saying sorry.Optus outage SOS sign with an Optus window display inset with a phone message saying sorry.

A major Optus outage will be reviewed by the government as disgruntled customers consider legal action. (Credit: Getty/Yahoo Finance)

Did you suffer a financial blow in the Optus outage? Contact belinda.grantgeary@yahooinc.com

Mobile phone customers with SOS showing on their devices could get on to another network in the case of an emergency, but Communications Minister Michelle Rowland said landlines could not.

She was the first to speak about the cause of the outage – stating it was “quite fundamental to the network” – and called on Optus to improve their communications as many felt left in the dark about what was going on.

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“My understanding is that this is a fault deep in the core. The core network basically encompasses everything from routing to electronics,” Rowland said, noting a “number of problems” were identified.

Bayer Rosmarin blamed a “technical network fault” for the outage, but the details of the cause still remains a mystery.

Optus reputation in tatters amid demands for compensation

Optus suffered a share price loss of about 4.5 per cent – close to $2 billion – during the outage, and the hits could keep on coming as disgruntled customers walk.

Optus users were seen lining up outside competitors doors, one woman even offering card.

Damage control appears to be a priority in the face of a mass exodus from the embattled telco, which is still repairing its reputation from one of Australia’s biggest cyber breaches.

” Now that the network is restored we will have a look at ways we can thank our customers for their patience and reward them for their loyalty,” Bayer Rosmarin told 9News, stopping short of promising compensation.

Consumer expert Joel Gibson told Yahoo Finance those impacted should be entitled to compensation, and that those in a locked in contract who are completely fed up with Optus could go to them and ask to cancel as “they might not stand in your way”.

Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin

Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin is in damage control mode after an outage impacted millions of Australians. (Credit: Supplied)

Optus outage causes customers to stand in line to get a new sim at VodafoneOptus outage causes customers to stand in line to get a new sim at Vodafone

Optus outage revolt: It’s pictures like these that will have Optus bosses concerned. (Source: X/ Heidi Murphy)

“If Optus refuses to compensate you for the loss and inconvenience, I’d suggest making a complaint to the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) as that often forces them to take your complaint seriously,” he said.

Gibson echoed calls from Rowland to keep evidence of losses.

“It is important, especially for small businesses, to keep receipts so that any recourse and any redress that may be available to them has that evidentiary base,” she said.

But those who suffered significant losses may take the legal fight to Optus before a compensation plan is worked out.

“There should be some compensation and I think that what we‘re going to have a meeting and some of the guys are going to be putting their hand up and saying let’s go to Shine Lawyers and look at a class action against this because this is not the first time,” taxi driver Ian Martin-Brown told A Current Affair.

He lost a day’s work and described how significantly that impacted him in the cost-of-living crisis, calling for national accountability.

Optus outage victims Anthony and IanOptus outage victims Anthony and Ian

Sydney cafe owner Anthony and taxi driver Ian were fuming after taking financial losses in the Optus outage. (Credit: A Current Affair)

“We‘re going through the worst time we’ve ever had and things aren’t cheap, things are dear, the inflation is through the roof, the increase in mortgages and it’s just ridiculous, it really is,” he said.

Sydney cafe owner Anthony said the outage cost him 30 per cent of his day’s takings, and fumed over the lack of communication with small business owners like himself.

Optus outage: What you need to know

  • Who was impacted? Up to 10 million mobile, landline and broadband customers and 400,000 businesses were without service from early Wednesday morning, with Optus stating services resumed about 6pm AEDT.

  • What caused the outage: A ‘technical error’ has been blamed but Optus won’t go into more detail because they say they don’t have it.

  • Is it a cyber attack? Fair question given 1 in 2 Aussies had their data compromised last year, but no.

  • Why does it matter if I am not with Optus? You could argue the vast majority of Australia was impacted in one way or another. People couldn’t communicate. There’s a story of a Sydney woman missing her mum’s final moments. Triple-0 calls and hospitals were caught up. The trickle-down to non-Optus customers was evident when public transport couldn’t be used, Uber was down, major banks’ call centres were out. The local cafe couldn’t take payments – bad for you not getting caffeine but worse for them missing out on revenue.

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