Sony, former workers in deal to settle lawsuit over Interview hacking


  • TECH
  • Thursday, 03 Sep 2015

Money woes: Sony's former workers said its negligence caused them economic harm.

Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc has reached a settlement agreement with nine former employees who had filed a lawsuit claiming that their personal data was stolen in a 2014 hacking tied to the studio's release of a comedy film set in North Korea, The Interview.

The plaintiffs' have until Oct 19 to submit a motion for preliminary approval of the proposed settlement case, according to a court filing. No additional details on the settlement were made public.

The news was first reported by Hollywood and media news website deadline.com.

In June, a US judge had rejected a bid by Sony Pictures, the entertainment arm of Sony Corp, to dismiss the lawsuit.

The former workers, who had sought class-action status on the suit, had said Sony's negligence caused them economic harm by forcing them to beef up credit monitoring to address their greater risk of identity theft.

The attack, which surfaced in November, wiped out massive amounts of data and led to the online distribution of e-mail, sensitive employee data and pirated copies of new movies.

Sony Pictures could not be reached for comment immediately. — Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

US Supreme Court rejects Musk appeal over social media posts that must be approved by Tesla
France's Thales could be tempted by some Atos defence assets, CFO says
France's Capgemini Q1 sales fall in slowing market
US man sent a 14-year-old girl nude photos on Snapchat
Microsoft to invest $1.7 billion in cloud, AI in Indonesia, CEO says
Deepfake of US principal’s voice is the latest case of AI being used for harm
Amazon Purr-rime: Cat accidentally shipped to online retailer
UK police warn of ‘sextortion’ scams against teenage boys
AI faces its ‘Oppenheimer Moment’ during killer robot arms race
Computer parts maker Logitech Q4 sales rise; first positive qtr in over 2 years

Others Also Read