The cyber criminals claim to have the private information of 20 million people who signed up to Co-op's membership scheme, but the firm would not confirm that number.
The collection featured poems focusing on the impact of Wales' main artery from north to south, with poets reflecting on memories of the journeys they made along the road or its impact on the landscape."We were very aware that although great fun as a theme, a book about a road wasn't the most eco message we could send out," Arachne Press director Cherry Potts said.
"The advantage rivers had as a theme, is that in Wales in particular it is really inclusive, and poets could write about almost anything in connection to a river."For Afonydd: Poems for Welsh Rivers /Cerddi Afonydd Cymru, the publisher chose 50 poems from over 400 entries in response to an open call.Each poem is published side by side with its translation either from, or into, Welsh, and the language the poem arrived in dictates which goes on the left page.
"We wanted to give Welsh equal weight. There is an ingrained assumption that to reach a big audience, poetry from Welsh poets must be in English," Ms Potts said."Because we wanted to encourage this group of poets to explore their first language, their mamiaith, we adopted the approach that whichever language the poem arrived in, we would translate, or help the poet translate."
Poet Natasha Gauthier, whose poem The Severn at Llanidloes is featured in Afonydd, said she was intrigued by the idea that the river Severn, "transforms from a Welsh river into an English one, 'bends the knee' and gradually loses its Welshness, its identity".
The Québecoise Canadian writer living in Cardiff grew up in Montreal, "in a culture that has fought for its language and identity and is proud of that fight", she said."I was thinking, wouldn't it be fun to find a company that makes them, sort of 'mock' blue plaques," Mr Johnson said.
He added they had cost him about £35 each.He initially came up with the idea for The Antelope pub in Hanley, he said.
"Various groups and genres of music fans used to get in there," Mr Johnson told BBC Radio Stoke.Mr Leigh, who himself used to be a DJ at The Void, said the city seemed to be "at the cutting edge of whatever music scene was evolving or going on at the time".