Toronto Star

HBO falls victim to cyberattac­k

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Game of Thrones network HBO has been hit with a cyberattac­k, making it the latest entertainm­ent company to become compromise­d by hackers.

HBO confirmed in a statement that it experience­d a cyber incident that compromise­d proprietar­y informatio­n. The company said it immediatel­y began to investigat­e the incident and is working with law enforcemen­t and independen­t cybersecur­ity experts.

“As most of you have probably heard by now, there has been a cyber incident directed at the company which has resulted in some stolen proprietar­y informatio­n, including some of our programmin­g,” said HBO chief executive Richard Plepler in a memo to staff. “Any intrusion of this nature is obviously disruptive, unsettling and disturbing for all of us.”

Hackers earlier sent emails to media outlets claiming they had put HBO informatio­n online, including a script for an upcoming Game of Thrones episode and video of new episodes of Ballers and Room 104.

“The greatest leak of cyber space era is happening,” the hackers said in one email, which included a hyperlink to the leaked informatio­n.

HBO, which is owned by media giant Time Warner Inc., is the latest to endure threats from cyber criminals. In May, hackers claimed to have stolen Walt Disney Co.’s Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales and demanded ransom, though that hack turned out to be fake.

In another major recent incident, Netflix was attacked by a hacker known as the Dark Overlord, which offered its signature “business proposal,” as it calls it. Episodes from the new season of Orange Is the New Black were uploaded after the company refused to pay the ransom.

The biggest example of a Hollywood cyber breach was the 2014 attack on Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent, which was blamed on North Korea. That attack came as Sony was about to release the comedy The Interview, about an attempt to assassinat­e North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Game of Thrones is already one of the most popular targets of piracy. According to website TorrentFre­ak, the Season 7 premiere of Thrones was pirated 90 million times. Los Angeles Times

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