jon: fox news alert in a frightening situation underway right now at fort lauderdale or hollywood international airport in florida. reports of shots fired in one of the terminals. we have seen aerial video from the helicopter, and there is some of it that shows passengers apparently just broke through the security doors and ran out on the tarmac. a number of reports of shots fired at fort lauderdale hollywood international airport. it is obviously quite a serious situation. they have that many people out there on the tarmac. airports never like to let passengers get outside the secure area, so this is going to cause flight delays that are going to continue throughout the day at fort lauderdale hollywood and possibly other places because those aircraft are going to be slowed down and departing. jenna: looking at social media as much as we can, it can
running on the tarmac there. presumably passengers who, again, just moments ago these folks were heading back inside the terminal. appeared to be heading back inside the terminal. bob, are you still with me? i certainly am, yes. bob, where are you? what s the scene like there? is it chaotic? not totally chaotic. it was a few moments ago. apparently i don t know whether someone assumed or thought they saw someone with a gun. so, it was kind of chaotic. people started running to the exit, so to speak. i don t think that was entirely true. they re making everyone sit down here at the gate. security has come by and assured us that all the security doors are closed. there s no getting in and there s no getting out. from the window at gate b-2, we do see a lot of police vehicles
not only for sony s parent company in tokyo, sony pictures in the united states, but a bunch of corporations that are now reexamining their cybersecurity. you may be going into work tomorrow morning and find that your password doesn t work because system-wide your employer may say everybody needs to change their password. and those are probably going to be happening, the types of security steps are going to be happening more and more and more. i went inside a cyberlab here in tokyo that says even sony, which has tried to up its security after previous hackings couldn t possibly have been prepared for something like this. hidden behind security doors and bulletproof glass, a tokyo office that could easily be the set of a sci-fi movie. only this plot is real. they say this is a map that shows all of the cyberattacks launched in japan just in the last month. hackers from around the world targeting thousands of japanese companies for hundreds of them, this tokyo cybersecurity firm is the
reporting. and you heard in her report how sony executives described the hacking as an act of terrorism. but should the company have been better prepared? to learn about past cyber attacks on sony, will ripley joins me from tokyo. you have reported on this. will? reporter: yeah, just within the last couple years, three years ago, actually, 2011, sony was the target of a huge hack where some tens of millions of people had their personal information basically put out there. their user names, their pass words. and just a couple of months later, sony pictures was hacked, and another 150,000 people had their information leaked. but up until this point, natalie, it was always people consider hacking a leak of personal information, pass words, destructive, but nothing like the attack that has really brought sony to its knees. hidden behind security doors and bulletproof glass, a set that
hidden behind security doors, a tokyo office that could be the set of a si-fi movie. they say this is the map that shows all the cyberattacks launched on japan in just the last month. hackers, targeting thousands of companies. for hundreds of them, this tokyo cybersecurity firm is the only line of defense. the hackers are always getting more advanced. sometimes too advanced for those trying to keep up. the chief technology officer knows a devastating hack like the one on sony pictures can penetrate even the best cyberdefense. you have all these experts here. could you have protected against an attack like this? could anybody protect against it? not 100%, he says. it s like watching a cold or getting the flu. or in sony s case, a disease that crippled a major