The passport information of G20 leaders was mistakenly emailed to the organiser of a soccer tournament.
You know that terrible, sinking feeling you get when you you've hit send on an email and realise it has gone to the wrong person?
Channel Ten / youtube.com
But instead of sending an email about how crazy your ex is to your crazy ex, imagine sending the personal details of Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin, Angela Merkel, Xi Jinping and other G20 leaders to someone you weren't supposed to.
Pictured: World's most powerful people waving goodbye to their personal information.
Glenn Hunt / Getty Images
As reported by The Guardian , that's exactly what happened to a staff member at the Australian Department of Immigration last November during the G20/koala cuddling summit in Brisbane.
In an email obtained under freedom of information laws, the staff member accidentally put the “name, date of birth, title, position, nationality, passport number, visa grant number and visa subclass held relating to 31 international leaders (i.e. prime ministers, presidents and their equivalents) attending the G20 leaders summit.”
Andrew Taylor / G20 Australia via Getty Images
How did this happen? The person didn't check the autofill function in the 'To' field in Outlook, and the highly sensitive email went to one of the people organising the Asian Cup soccer tournament.
FOX
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