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In this episode of Mark and Pete, we turn to a rather surreal development: the hacking of one of the most trusted names in children’s entertainment.
Peppa Pig, owned by Hasbro, has reportedly faced a breach involving internal production content. While details remain limited, the implications are not. This is a global brand broadcast in over 180 countries, translated into dozens of languages, and worth billions in licensing, merchandising, and media revenue. It is also, crucially, trusted by parents.
We explore what it means when even something as seemingly harmless as a children’s cartoon becomes a target. This isn’t just about leaked episodes or intellectual property. It raises questions about digital vulnerability, cultural influence, and the systems quietly shaping the next generation.
In a world where everything is connected, nothing is too small to matter.
Drawing on Luke 16:10, we consider the principle that faithfulness in small things reflects something deeper. Culture is not only shaped in parliaments or universities—it is formed in living rooms, in habits, and in the stories children absorb without question.
There is a tendency to dismiss these things as trivial. But the “little foxes” still spoil the vineyard.
This episode reflects on security, innocence, and the unseen layers of modern life where influence operates quietly but effectively.
Because if even Peppa Pig requires cybersecurity, then perhaps we are not dealing with a simple entertainment problem at all.
We are dealing with formation.
And formation, once lost, is not easily recovered.
By Mark and Pete5
55 ratings
In this episode of Mark and Pete, we turn to a rather surreal development: the hacking of one of the most trusted names in children’s entertainment.
Peppa Pig, owned by Hasbro, has reportedly faced a breach involving internal production content. While details remain limited, the implications are not. This is a global brand broadcast in over 180 countries, translated into dozens of languages, and worth billions in licensing, merchandising, and media revenue. It is also, crucially, trusted by parents.
We explore what it means when even something as seemingly harmless as a children’s cartoon becomes a target. This isn’t just about leaked episodes or intellectual property. It raises questions about digital vulnerability, cultural influence, and the systems quietly shaping the next generation.
In a world where everything is connected, nothing is too small to matter.
Drawing on Luke 16:10, we consider the principle that faithfulness in small things reflects something deeper. Culture is not only shaped in parliaments or universities—it is formed in living rooms, in habits, and in the stories children absorb without question.
There is a tendency to dismiss these things as trivial. But the “little foxes” still spoil the vineyard.
This episode reflects on security, innocence, and the unseen layers of modern life where influence operates quietly but effectively.
Because if even Peppa Pig requires cybersecurity, then perhaps we are not dealing with a simple entertainment problem at all.
We are dealing with formation.
And formation, once lost, is not easily recovered.

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