Hillary Clinton broke her silence today about a State Department Inspector General's report that was critical of her use of private server and email address.

Clinton told news networks that the report – created without her input after she and her State Department aides declined to be interviewed by the watchdog agency – was insignificant and 'nothing has changed.'

More than 24 hours after the release of the damning report Clinton finally spoke to reporters, telling ABC News that she didn't speak to the IG because she had already testified before the Benghazi committee – and she posted 'information' about the emails on her website.

Those moves, she suggested, should count.

She speaks! Hillary Clinton finally talked about the State Department Inspector General's report that said she shouldn't have used a private email server to conduct government business

'I have talked about this for many, many months,' she told ABC in Las Vegas. 'I testified for 11 hours before the Benghazi committee. I have answered numerous questions.'

Clinton said, 'We have posted information on our website and the information that we had is out there.

'It's been clearly public and my email use was widely known throughout the department, throughout the government, and I have provided all of my work related emails, and I've asked that they be made public,' she added.

Yesterday the State Department's Inspector General released a report that said she shouldn't have used a private email server to conduct government business.

She should have asked permission before setting up her homebrew system, the report concluded.

And had she asked permission she would have been declined.

The independent agency also went after her for taking 22 months to turn over her emails to government after she left public service.

'At a minimum, Secretary Clinton should have surrendered all emails dealing with Department business before leaving government service and, because she did not do so, she did not comply with the Department's policies that were implemented in accordance with the Federal Records Act,' the report said.

Clinton did not talk to the State Department's Inspector General as part of the review.

She told ABC that using the personal email account was 'allowed' and the rules have since been 'clarified.'

'This report makes clear that personal email use was the practice for other secretaries of state,' she said.

'It's the same story. Just like previous secretaries of state, I used a personal email. Many people did. It was not at all unprecedented. I have turned over all my emails. No one else can say that,' she also said.

On MSNBC, Chuck Todd confronted her about the discovery of an email in the review process that revealed her resistance to getting a State Department email because she didn't want 'any risk of the personal being accessible.'

'What were you concerned about?' he asked. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, congressional requests? 'Can you explain what that sentence meant?'

'Oh of course not. This arose because I worried that some individuals that I was emailing to on their State.gov accounts were not getting my emails,' she said.

Clinton said she considered getting a State Department email, 'but ultimately the technical problem was resolved' and she continued using her personal email because she thought it was 'convenient.'

But she said 'it turned out to be anything but' and as she's said before 'it was a mistake.'

Todd pushed back and again asked what she meant by the accessibility statement.

'Well nobody wants their personal emails made public,' she said.

After the report was released yesterday, Clinton held campaign events, including one in Anaheim where she came face-to-face with two shirtless superfans, who had pro-Clinton messages written on their chests.

She did not talk to campaign press, however. As one spokesman said, the facts hadn't changed, so there was no need for Clinton to avail herself to questions from her traveling press corps.

The campaign apparently changed its thinking overnight, and Clinton did a handful of interviews on Thursday, attempting to sweep the controversy again under the rug and change the topic to her forthcoming general election battle against Donald Trump.

On CNN, talking to Wolf Blitzer, she again said that she thought the private use of email was allowed when she was secretary of state and reiterated her regret for it.

'It was still a mistake,' she told the host. 'If I could go back, I'd do it differently.'

She then attacked her potential general election rival.

'I know Donald Trump says outrageous things all the time but today he officially clinched the Republican nomination so this is as real as it gets,' she said.

'And this man who is an unqualified loose cannon is in reach of the most important job in the world so it should concern every American,' she added.

Sounding the alarm about Trump in Las Vegas on Thursday, Clinton said, 'Donald Trump is an urgent threat to our rights and to our country.'

MSNBC's Chuck Todd told her during a phone interview early Friday evening, 'That's language you might use for some enemy of the United States.'

'Well I think it fits, Chuck,' she said. That President Barack Obama came out of meetings with world leaders and reported that their 'rattled' by the 'threat Donald Trump represents.'

Clinton said, 'Of course their rattled' by his foreign policy positions. 'I know that Donald Trump thinks this is all a point of pride, that people like me or President Obama are saying these things about him, but it's not.

'This is not a reality show, it's not just politics, this is serious. The entire world looks to the President of the United States for leadership and stability.'

Hillary Clinton, campaigning today in Las Vegas, contended that even with the release of the report 'nothing has changed' and that she didn't speak to the IG because she testified before the Benghazi committee

Trump had meanwhile called the IG report for Clinton a 'disaster.'

On Thursday he also conspired with Clinton's primary opponent, Bernie Sanders, to hold a debate without the former cabinet official in California. The two men have agreed to hold the spectacle to raise money for charity.

This afternoon Trump said he'd do it if they could raise $10 to $15 million for charity that benefits women.

Clinton laughed at the idea of Trump-Sanders debate, or a three-way face-off that includes her, this afternoon and said, 'Well, I understood they said that was a joke...I’m gonna look forward to debating Donald Trump.'

Sanders has a steep - if not impossible - climb to make in order to catch up with Clinton the race for the Democratic nomination. He's said he may stay in the race all the way until the July convention and make a play for the superdelegate vote on the floor.

In her interview with ABC News Clinton indicated that she still hasn't spoken to Sanders directly about the challenge but their aides are 'communicating.'

'But know that we’re both trying to do our best in the upcoming contest, but I have every reason to believe that after June 7th, we will begin to unify the Democratic Party,' Clinton said.

Clinton laughed at the idea of Trump-Sanders debate, or a three-way face-off that includes her, this afternoon and said, 'Well, I understood they said that was a joke...I’m gonna look forward to debating Donald Trump'

She again reminded Sanders and his supporters that she backed up Barack Obama when he beat her out out for the nomination in 2008 and asserted that she is 'very sure' that the Vermont senator will follow in her footsteps.

As to whether she's willing to make any concessions at the convention, particularly as it pertains to the platform, in order to bring Sanders supporters over to her side, Clinton said, 'We're gonna go through the process. We're gonna be talking about everything.

'We’re gonna go into the convention unified, we’re gonna come out even more unified, and we’re going to defeat Donald Trump in November,' she triumphantly added.