The stolen documents included park construction and renovation files, as well as engineering-related files.
The Anubis ransomware-as-a-service operation claimed to have stolen 64 GB of data from Disneyland Paris.
Information pilfered from a Disneyland partner firm included 39,000 park construction- and renovation-related files, according to Anubis, which has exposed an archive of photos and videos on its leak site purportedly showing plans for attractions. According to Hackread touted the incident to be "the largest data leak" in Disneyland Park history.
Also part of the stolen documents were engineering-related files and other documents under non-disclosure agreements. Additional details regarding customer and visitor data compromise were not provided by Anubis, which also did not mention providing a ransom demand.
Disneyland Paris has also not acknowledged the assertions of Anubis.
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Dan Raywood is a B2B journalist with 25 years of experience, including covering cybersecurity for the past 17 years. He has extensively covered topics from Advanced Persistent Threats and nation-state hackers to major data breaches and regulatory changes.
He has spoken at events including 44CON, Infosecurity Europe, RANT Forum, BSides Scotland, Steelcon and the National Cyber Security Show, and served as editor of SC Media UK, Infosecurity Magazine and IT Security Guru. He was also an analyst with 451 Research and a product marketing lead at Tenable.