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Sony CEO defends company response time to network attack

Howard Stringer, CEO and president of Sony Corporation, speaks at a function to launch the Sony Media Technology Centre on the outskirts of MumbaiMoods have surely improved around the Sony offices now that the company’s online services have been restored following the April attack that left PlayStation Network, Qriocity and Sony Online Entertainment down for almost a month. Company CEO Howard Stringer was downright apologetic when he spoke publicly about the outage at the start of this month, but now that normalcy is returning he’s taken a more aggressive stance toward critics of Sony’s week-long delay between shutting down online services and letting customers know that their personal data had been compromised.

“Most of these breaches go unreported by companies,” he said during a press briefing this week (via Gamasutra. “Forty-three percent notify victims within a month. We reported in a week. You’re telling me my week wasn’t fast enough?”

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He carried that same perspective into a later interview with Bloomberg. “There is no precedent for this in people’s experience,” he argued. “Most reports now seem to indicate that we acted very quickly and very responsibly.”

Critics have argued that the gap between the Sony services being taken offline on April 20 and the company’s official statement on April 26 notifying customers that their personal data had been compromised was too long. Sony counters that the week delay can be attributed to the time taken in ascertaining the extent of the damage. Critics, on the other hand, contend that a statement to customers should have accompanied the outage on April 20, as every customer has a right to know if there’s even a possibility that his or her personal information — including credit card data — may have been stolen.

There’s no clear right or wrong answer here, it comes down to what your personal opinion is. Sony certainly acted quickly in bringing down its online services, but placing blame on the decision to not prematurely cause a panic is much more open to discussion. Stringer calls this incident a “hiccup in the road to a network future.” Do you agree? Or are these merely the words of a company CEO trying to protect his business interests?

Adam Rosenberg
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
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