Natalie Portman, Tom Hanks, Daniel Craig, and other A-list (and B-list) stars are the latest to feel the effects of Sony's hackers.

In new documents obtained by Fusion, aliases that actors used to protect themselves while working on Sony projects have been revealed to the public.

The documents were leaked by the "Guardians of Peace" hacker group, which earlier Monday posted a message online demanding that Sony pull "The Interview," a James Franco and Seth Rogen comedy about two journalists recruited by the CIA to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

Ahead of the film's Dec. 25 release, Sony has experienced a series of scary cyberattacks.



Check out some of the fake names used by actors below revealed in the latest leak (via Fusion):

Tom Hanks: goes by "Harry Lauder" and "Johnny Madrid" (the former of which was the name of a famous Scottish comedian, and the latter of which may be a reference to a character on "Lancer," a 1960s Western series)

Tobey Maguire: goes by "Neil Deep"

Natalie Portman: goes by "Lauren Brown"

Clive Owen: goes by "Robert Fenton" (his wife's name is Sarah-Jane Fenton)

Rob Schneider: goes by "Nazzo Good" (not so good – get it?)

Jude Law: goes by "Mr. Perry"

Daniel Craig: goes by "Olwen Williams" (an homage to his grandfather, Olwyn Williams)

Jessica Alba: goes by "Cash Money" (her husband's name is Cash Warren)

Ice Cube: goes by “Darius Stone” and “O’Shea Jackson” (the former of which was his character’s name in XXX: State of the Union, and the latter of which is his actual name)

On Monday, Sony CEO Michael Lynton sent a company-wide memo in which he said the studio was doing everything it could to protect employees after a series of cyberattacks that revealed their personal information, including Social Security numbers and addresses.



Lynton, whose $3 million salary was revealed in one of the leaks by hackers, promised staffers the FBI "have dedicated their senior staff to this global investigation" and that "recognized experts are working on this matter and looking out for our security."