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A former Disney employee who was fired for misconduct has admitted that she hacked the company’s menu-making program to change key points, including food information that would have been dangerous to customers at local restaurants.
A complaint filed by the Department of Justice last year alleges that a man named Michael Scheuer engaged in a series of cyber attacks after he was fired from the company he worked for. The company involved was not named in the complaint, although additional reports identified the company as Disney. Now, it has been reported that Scheuer, who previously worked as a “Menu Production Manager” for the company, is said to have admitted to the computer errors in question. part of the steering wheel.
Supreme Court they say Scheuer has agreed to pay restitution to Disney and a federal fine. Scheuer’s lawyer, David Haas, says: “Mr. Scheuer is ready to accept responsibility for his behavior. Unfortunately, he has a mental illness that developed when Disney fired him after he came on paternity leave.” Haas added: “Nobody was in danger of being hurt.” and he is very sorry for what happened.”
Reached for comment by Gizmodo, Haas confirmed the Court Watch report, noting that no date has been set for his plea. The date of appeal is the date on which the accused appeals, after the appeal between the prosecutor and the public prosecutor.
Scheuer’s attacks on the company reportedly spanned three months. At the time, he “disrupted the chain of restaurants operated by” Disney, the original complaint said. The “evil nature” of these attacks involved messing up various menus by changing their appearance to Wingdings, thus making them inconsistent. In some cases, Scheuer says he messed up profanity on menus. The most serious charges, however, involved Scheuer’s attempt to tamper with menu information. Scheuer is also accused of making denial-of-service threats to the employee accounts of several former employees.
Court Watch will reveal more about what Scheuer appears to have done, based on newly released documents.
Scheuer turned the wine section of the liquor store into a crowd-pleasing bar. Court records say he, at one point, added a swastika to food. Scheuer also admitted that he released a link and logged in that he used to change menus on the dark web.
Fortunately, there is no list of restaurants that Scheuer has managed to allocate space to.
Disney was hit with an unrelated “wrongful death” lawsuit last year after a woman died while eating at a restaurant on one of Disney’s Florida properties. The woman had an allergy to nuts and dairy and she and her husband were wrongly told by their waiter that the food they ordered could be cooked without those ingredients. The case gained notoriety after Disney tried to get the case dismissed based on the mandatory part of Disney+ subscriptions. After much protest, Disney announced that it would drop its legal process and allow the case to go to trial.