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Pirates Of The Caribbean 5 hack was a hoax: Disney. While it was thought Disney had been hacked, it turns out that those making demands didn’t have anything. THERE has been a spate of hacking attacks in recent weeks targeted at big movie studios in which cyber criminals try to kidnap content and hold it for ransom. Netflix’s popular show Orange is the New Black was stolen and prematurely released by hackers a few weeks ago, while shortly after six people were arrested by Indian authorities attempting to hold a major movie to ransom.
Around the same time Disney announced it had been hacked by a group demanding payment or it would prematurely release an unnamed blockbuster movie. But after making the apparent hack public Disney became very coy about discussing details and refused to talk to the media. The Los Angeles Times later identified the movie being ransomed as the latest Pirates of the Caribbean film but there was also speculation it could be the new Star Wars movie due to hit cinemas in December. Disney Chief executive Bob Iger initially held a staff meeting in which he claimed that hackers had been in contact and were threatening to share the film online in several parts. Mr Iger said the hackers would release five minutes of the film and then 2. The company declined to pay the hackers and turned it over to the FBI.
Kotaku elder, lover of video games, toys, snacks and other unsavory things. Here’s a little bit of art imitating life: hackers have obtained Disney’s upcoming Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, and are demanding the studio. The unknown hackers likely made a "worm," or self spreading malware, by exploiting a piece of code from the US National Security Agency known as "Eternal Blue".
- Hackers hold Disney to ransom: Will Pirates Of The Caribbean 5 be leaked online? Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed to his staff that an unreleased film has been stolen.
- Was the Pirates of the Caribbean 5 hack a hoax? Disney CEO says no movie was stolen 'We don't believe that it was real and nothing has happened,' Bob Iger reportedly.
- Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (released overseas as Pirates of the Caribbean: Salazar's Revenge) is a 2017 American fantasy film and the fifth.
- GIF by Andrew Liszewski from Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man Tell No Tales (Disney) It’s been a dizzying few days for news about hackers demanding ransom.
- The much-awaited Disney movie Pirates of the Caribbean 5 was compromised by a hacker group called TheDarkOverlord.
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- Online hackers have obtained Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales and are threatening to leak it ahead of its scheduled Memorial Day opening. At this time.
But for some, the story didn’t seem to add up. Website Torrent. Freak dedicated to all things torrent- related including hacking and piracy conducted its own “investigation” and suggested the demand from the hacker group was a hoax.“Our conclusion was that the . The whole thing was much to do about nothing. Following an FBI investigation, the Disney boss said there was no way that anybody had access to the films before they appeared in the cinema.“To our knowledge, we were not hacked,” Mr Iger told Yahoo Finance over the weekend.“We had a threat of a hack of a movie being stolen.“We decided to take it seriously but not react in the manner in which the person who was threatening us had required.”Hacking movie studios to hold content for ransom is a growing trend among cyber criminals but others, it seems, are hoping to get rich by simply pretending to do it.