Florida Man Accused of Hacking Disney World Menus, Changing Font to Wingdings

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Florida Man Accused of Hacking Disney World Menus, Changing Font to Wingdings

With just days to go until the 2024 presidential election in the United States, WIRED reported on documents that revealed US government assessments about multiple components of election security and stability. First obtained by the national security transparency nonprofit Property of the People, one report distributed by the US Department of Homeland Security in October assessed that financially motivated cybercriminals and ideologically motivated hacktivists are more likely than state-backed hackers to attack US election infrastructure. Another government memo warned of the risk to the election of insider threats, noting that such internal malfeasance “could derail or jeopardize a fair and transparent election process.”

With so much at stake in a hyper-polarized and combative climate, US elections have become increasingly militarized, with bulletproof glass, drones, defensive blockades, and snipers protecting election offices, and election officials bracing for the possibility of violent attacks. A WIRED investigation also revealed a successful CIA hack of Venezuela’s military payroll system that was part of a clandestine Trump administration effort to overthrow the country’s autocratic president, Nicolás Maduro.

In other cybersecurity news, WIRED did a deep dive into the firewall vendor Sophos’ five-year turf war to try to remove Chinese hackers running espionage operations on some vulnerable devices—and keep them out. And researchers warn that a “critical” zero-click vulnerability in a default photo app on Synology network-attached storage devices could be exploited by hackers to steal data or infiltrate networks.

As always, there’s more. Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.

Ex-Disney Employee Accused of Hacking Disney World Menus, Changing Font to Wingdings

A Disney employee who was fired from the company and still had access to its passwords allegedly hacked into the software used by Walt Disney World’s restaurants, according to reporting by 404 Media and Court Watch. A criminal complaint against Michael Scheuer claims he repeatedly accessed the third-party menu-creation system created for Disney and changed menus, including changing fonts to Windings—the font made up entirely of symbols.

“The fonts were renamed by the threat actor to maintain the name of the original font, but the actual characters appeared as symbols,” the criminal complaint says. “As a result of this change, all of the menus within the database were unusable because the font changes propagated throughout the database.”

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