Advertisement

Mitt Romney urges Sony to 'fight,' release 'The Interview' free online

By Veronica Linares
The Zipper news bulletin in Times Square shows the latest news in the Sony Hack in New York City on December 18, 2014. Sony Pictures is recovering from a massive hack, which forced the company to shut down its computer system last Monday after thousands of financial documents, emails and a handful of unreleased movies to file-sharing sites were leaked. A hacking group calling itself "Guardians of Peace" broke in to the entertainment unit's computer networks and leaked thousands of financial documents, emails and a handful of unreleased movies to file-sharing sites. The group apparently objected to the planned release of "The Interview," a comedy about two TV journalists who become embroiled in a plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. In response to hackers' threats to attack movie theaters, Sony canceled the movie's release Wednesday. UPI/ Dennis Van Tine
The Zipper news bulletin in Times Square shows the latest news in the Sony Hack in New York City on December 18, 2014. Sony Pictures is recovering from a massive hack, which forced the company to shut down its computer system last Monday after thousands of financial documents, emails and a handful of unreleased movies to file-sharing sites were leaked. A hacking group calling itself "Guardians of Peace" broke in to the entertainment unit's computer networks and leaked thousands of financial documents, emails and a handful of unreleased movies to file-sharing sites. The group apparently objected to the planned release of "The Interview," a comedy about two TV journalists who become embroiled in a plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. In response to hackers' threats to attack movie theaters, Sony canceled the movie's release Wednesday. UPI/ Dennis Van Tine | License Photo

WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (UPI) -- Former presidential candidate Mitt Romney weighed in on Sony Entertainment's decision to cancel the theatrical release Friday of The Interview and urged the production company not to cave to hacker's threats.

Romney's plea followed Sony's decision to cancel the release of the film -- a comedy in which two journalists are enlisted to kill North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un -- after multiple theater companies canceled scheduled screenings of the film over violence threats made by a group that hacked Sony's computer system in November.

Advertisement

"@SonyPictures don't cave, fight: release @TheInterview free online globally," Romney tweeted. "Ask viewers for voluntary $5 contribution to fight #Ebola."

The former Massachusetts governor's request echoes that of Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., who also shared his discontent with the handling of the threats on Twitter.

"No one should kid themselves. With the Sony collapse, America has lost its first cyberwar. This is a very very dangerous precedent," tweeted former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who also held a Q&A on North Korea's Cyber War on America via Facebook on Thursday evening.

Advertisement

The FBI confirmed Fridday that North Koreans were behind the Sony hack.

The attack started with the release of emails from Sony's executives, employees and celebrities with ties to production giant.

The production and release of another film has halted following the hacker's threats to attack theaters showing The Interview.

Latest Headlines