The U.S. government has yet to reveal what evidence they have of a “linkage” between North Korea and the Nov. 24 hacking attack on Sony Entertainment but they are considering a “range of options” in response, according to Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson.
Sad day for creative expression. #feareatsthesoul
— Steve Carell (@SteveCarell) December 17, 2014
The hack attack had previously divulged personal email exchanges, crucial details about upcoming film projects, and intimate information about Sony employees, such as medical records and social security numbers. The “Guardians of Peace,” the shadowy organization claiming credit for the breach, eventually made violent threats against the company and theaters which screened their comedy film “The Interview,” which depicts a fictional attempt to assassinate North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un.
On Wednesday, Sony pulled the film from distribution after five of the biggest theater chains in America said they wouldn’t screen the film on its scheduled Christmas Day premiere.
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Johnson told mnsbc’s Andrea Mitchell on Thursday that his department considers the hacking a “very serious attack.” During his remarks he referenced the controversial 2006 British film “Death of a President” — which only played on a few hundred U.S. screens amid widespread condemnation. That film, which was shot in the style of a faux documentary, depicted the killing of President George W. Bush and the potential political impact of the event. It was largely dismissed by critics as sensationalist and exploitative.
“Let me say this — insofar as the movie is concerned, I recall about seven years ago there was movie about — it was a fictional account of an assassination of a U.S. president. I saw the movie. I didn’t like the movie. I was offended by the movie. But people in this country have the right to produce all sorts of different fictional accounts of things that we do not attempt to restrain in any way. And so this attack, as I said, represents not only an attack on a company and its people, but also on basic freedoms we have in this country,” added Johnson.
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest also spoke on the Sony hacking at his presidential briefing on Thursday. He cautioned that the U.S. wants to have a “proportional response” to avoid getting provoked into a response that the perpetrators might have been seeking.
“The president and the administration stand squarely on the side of artists and other private citizens who seek to freely express their views,” Earnest added. “Sometimes those viewers can be laced with criticism, or are sometimes intended to provoke either some kind of either comedic response or one that is intended to be some element of pretty biting social commentary. All of that is appropriate and well within the right of private citizens to express their views.”
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The White House officials’ remarks come one day after President Obama weighed in on the controversy during an interview with ABC News. The president said that if there was evidence of a “serious and credible” threat, the government would alert the public. He added that his “recommendation would be that people go to the movies.”








