unreleased television shows from several major networks shared the coming season of the Netflix series “ Orange Is the New Black ” on Saturday after the person said the streaming service failed to meet its ransom requestsAttack.Ransom. The breach appears to have occurred at the postproduction company Larson Studios , a popular digital-mixing service in Los Angeles for television networks and movie studios . The hacker or hackers , who go by the name “ thedarkoverlord , ” also claim to have stolenAttack.Databreachunreleased content from ABC , Fox , National Geographic and IFC . The Federal Bureau of Investigation learned of the episode at Larson Studios in January but did not start notifying the content companies until a month ago . A message to Larson Studios was not immediately returned . On Twitter , thedarkoverlord suggested that other networks would have their shows released next . “ Oh , what fun we ’ re all going to have , ” the hacker said . “ We ’ re not playing any games anymore. ” Netflix had announced this year that Season 5 of “ Orange Is the New Black ” would be released June 9 , and it was not immediately clear whether it planned to move up the release date . In a statement , Netflix said : “ We are aware of the situation . A production vendor used by several major TV studios had its security compromised and the appropriate law enforcement authorities are involved . ” This specific breachAttack.Databreachhighlights a risk posed by the weak security practices in the postproduction studios that manage the release of proprietary entertainment content . While companies like Netflix and Fox might invest in state-of-the-art cybersecurity defense technology , they must also rely on an ecosystem of postproduction vendors , ranging from mom-and-pop shops to more sophisticated outfits like Dolby and Technicolor , which may not deploy the same level of cybersecurity and threat intelligence . In a message posted Saturday , thedarkoverlord criticized Netflix for not meeting its blackmail requestsAttack.Ransom. “ It didn ’ t have to be this way , Netflix , ” the message said . “ You ’ re going to lose a lot more money in all of this than what our modest offer was. ” The statement continued : “ We ’ re quite ashamed to breathe the same air as you . We figured a pragmatic business such as yourselves would see and understand the benefits of cooperating with a reasonable and merciful entity like ourselves. ” The hacker threatened to release content from other studios on Saturday if its demandsAttack.Ransomwere not met . ABC , Fox and IFC declined to comment , and a message to National Geographic was not immediately returned . The alias thedarkoverlord has popped up in other recent attacks , including one last January on a small charity in Muncie , Ind. , the Little Red Door Cancer Services of East Central Indiana . In that case , the hackers wiped the organization ’ s servers and backup servers , and demandedAttack.Ransom50 bitcoins — valued at $ 43,000 — to restore the data . The organization did not payAttack.Ransom.