Over the summer,Pretty Ex-Girlfriend Disney's internal communications channels suffered a data breach. We now know that as a result of this breach, guests and employees were affected, with personal information being stolen by hackers.
Earlier this summer, a hacker group called "NullBulge" gained accessto over 1TB of sensitive data from Disney after infiltrating the company's internal Slack channels. Now, a new reportby the Wall Street Journal, which viewed the leaked files, has uncovered more about exactly what was in the stolen files.
SEE ALSO: [UPDATE: Disney responds] A death at Disney World leads to legal battle over Disney+ terms of serviceThe leak consists of more than 44 million messages found in Disney's Slack workplace channels. This also includes around 18,800 spreadsheet files and 13,000 PDFs. The data leaked by the hackers was limited to files Disney employees posted in a Disney Slack channel, with both private and public channels affected. Private direct messages between Disney employees in Slack are also not found in the leak.
While some of Disney's internal company information and financials were part of the trove of stolen data, the most concerning details involve the private data belonging to Disney's theme park and Disney Cruise Line customers and employees.
The Disney data leaked by hackers includes private information for Disney Cruise Line staff and guests, as well as theme park attendees.
Physical addresses, birthdates, passport numbers, visa information, and even current assignments belonging to Disney Cruise Line crew members were found amongst the data stolen by hackers.
Another file contained names, addresses, and phone numbers tied to passengers on the Disney Cruise Line.
Information on guests at Disneyland was also discovered in the leaked data. It appears a "cluster" of Disneyland guests who had dining reservations at the park had their names and contact information revealed.
It's unclear exactly how many Disneyland and Disney Cruise Line guests and staff have been affected.
The leak includes new financial information for Disney's streaming service, Disney+.
According to internal spreadsheets found in the leaked data, Disney+ made more than $2.4 billion in revenue in the second quarter of 2024.
While Disney does publicly report its streaming financial information to investors, as the Wall Street Journalpoints out, Disney does not disclose exactly how much each of its individual streaming services – Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ – contributes to that overall total. The leaked revenue data reveals that Disney+ contributes 43 percent of revenue for Disney's direct-to-consumer entertainment business, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The leak also includes some very interesting financial details for Disney theme parks. Between October 2021 and June 2024, Disney's add-on theme park service Genie+ brought in more than $724 million in revenue at Disney's Orlando, Florida resort complex, Disney World. Genie+ was a paid service that allowed Disney World guests to skip to the front of the line for the theme park's attractions. Disney replaced Genie+ in July with a similar paid add-on service called Lightning Lane.
Mashable has reached out to Disney for comment, and will update this post if we hear back.
Topics Cybersecurity Disney Disney+
Previous:Cops on Campus
Elon Musk calls out reporters on Tesla earnings callApple reportedly testing next year's iPhones without Qualcomm's chipsAT&T will open AI marketplace to the public next yearAll eyez on Chance the Rapper's Halloween costumeGoogle's new 'Poly' service makes it easier to build VR and AR appsForget burgers, Ukrainians want an emoji for BorschtTesla has bad news if you're waiting for a Model 3Every sweater Nancy wears on 'Stranger Things', rankedTarget, Walmart, and Ebay are pushing Christmas way too earlyThese kids dressed up as Maxine Waters for Halloween to #ReclaimCandyGoogle's new 'Poly' service makes it easier to build VR and AR appsThis student's hilariously British costume definitely wins HalloweenThese 'Wolfenstein 2' Easter eggs take aim at neoThese 'Wolfenstein 2' Easter eggs take aim at neoThe latest Apple Watch update finally lets you stream music over LTE'Your power scares me' senator tells Facebook during first hearing on 2016 election'Bake Off' star Nadiya Hussain tweets sombre message on racist abuse she faces6 women accuse director Brett Ratner of harassment or misconduct'Overwatch' players settle absurdly long overtime in the most hilarious wayFast Pair for Androids will allow Bluetooth devices to pair with a tap Redux: John Edgar Wideman, Gail Godwin, Jascha Kessler In the Studio with Lorna Simpson Slap the Wave Black Friday 2023: Everything you need to know The 'crying Northwestern kid' is all grown up now 15+ Black Friday 2023 Chromebook deals at Best Buy Staff Picks: Strip Clubs, Lightning Rods, and Extramarital Affairs 44 Black Friday headphone deals: AirPods Pro at record 50+ best Black Friday monitor deals: Save up to $800 UFO Drawings from the National Archives To the Future Readers of Lucie Brock Redux: Luisa Valenzuela, Gordon Lish, Thomas Healy The Jumpsuit That Will Replace All Clothes Forever Young men are stressed out about sex, report finds Tinder rolls out Relationship Types and pronouns features 2018 Whiting Awards: Rickey Laurentiis, Poetry Best deals of the day March 16: Arlo video doorbell, Acer 516 GE, and M1 MacBook Air 35+ best pet deals to shop on Black Friday Wordle today: The answer and hints for November 24 Phoning Home
1.6073s , 8223.046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Pretty Ex-Girlfriend】,Openness Information Network