The First Amendment requires that compelled disclosure from journalists be a last resort, ... Apple must first investigate its own house before seeking to disturb the freedom of the press.

A tech mandate requiring backdoors in the Internet endangers the privacy of innocent people, stifles innovation, and risks the Internet as a forum for free and open expression.

We wanted the public to see this.

What they have done so far is a start, but it does not resolve all issues. Sony has fixed the immediate security flaw but there are other flaws. It is critical for Sony to do a robust notice campaign to make people aware of this.

It is still too early to sound the death knell for peer-to-peer MP3 sharing technologies. Congress provided this safe harbor, because they wanted to provide protection so that the information location industry could provide this useful service.

While they're willing to seek subpoenas for people without associations with Apple, they failed to review laptops or e-mails.

Everyone is being impacted but the spammers.

One of the key issues in this case is protecting the rights of journalists.

We can't say that the software is now secure. We're going to continue to raise these issues with Sony.