Sony Pictures Entertainment told some media to stop reporting on the content stolen by Hackers who attacked the computer network company documents last month, according to three reports .
The New York Times, The Hollywood Reporter and Variety reports published on Sunday that they had received a letter from David Boies , an attorney for Sony, claiming that
publications disclose stop and destroy the documents.
The study “does not consent to having, analyze, copy, publish, upload, down or make use” of information, Boies said in the letter, according the report of the New York Times.
A Sony spokesman declined to comment on the reports. Representatives of Variety and The Hollywood Reporter could not be located immediately via email for Sunday.
The New York Times spokeswoman Eileen Murphy said: “Any decision on whether or how to use the information will take into account the significance of the news and the question arose of how information and who has access to it”
A spokesman for Boies confirmed that the lawyer had sent the letter to some media on behalf of Sony, but declined to discuss details of the letter. The leaked internal documents caused a stir in the study, a unit of Japan’s Sony Corp, and showed key internal discussions on the future of the company.
Hackers published dozens of documents including salaries and information financial, marketing plans and contracts.
In addition, the documents exchanged emails in which the co-chairman Amy Pascal joked about race President Barack Obama included. After arising reports on the subject, Pascal issued a public apology for “insensitive and inappropriate” emails.
Pascal did not answer a request for comment and a spokeswoman for Sony declined to discuss the future of the executive. In a memorandum sent on December 2, Sony acknowledged that a lot of information had been stolen by hackers but declined to confirm specific documents.
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