US government now believes that North Korea didn't act alone in
launching a massive cyber-attack against Sony Pictures. Instead, it
"contracted" hackers from outside the isolated country to bring down the
entertainment firm.
That North
Korea would need outside help isn't exactly a revelation: The country
isn't known to have particularly sophisticated electronic capabilities.
But the news helps to reassert North Korea's central role in the attack
at a time when some security experts, upset that the US government isn't
explaining its data-gathering techniques, are openly wondering whether
the correct attacker has been identified.
"The
FBI has concluded the Government of North Korea is responsible for the
theft and destruction of data on the network of Sony Pictures
Entertainment," a Federal Bureau of Investigation statement reiterated
this week. "There is no credible information to indicate that any other
individual or party is responsible for this cyber-incident."
North
Korea has denied its involvement, of course, and a number of conspiracy
theories have emerged since so little public information has been made
available about the attacks. But the US has said, repeatedly now, that
these attacks originated with the North Korean government. Even
President Obama has publicly stated that North Korea was responsible, a
move that would not have been made lightly.
There is other related news.
North Korea recently accused the US government of being responsible for "erasing" the totalitarian state from the Internet a week ago.
Rather than deny the charge, the US has simply remained silent on the
issue, though a DOJ spokesperson at the time said that some parts of the
US response to the Sony Pictures attack would be "seen" while others
"may not be seen."
And then there's
"The Interview," the silly comedy movie that sits at the heart of this
drama. After pulling the theatrical release of the movie because of
now-discredited terrorist threats, Sony eventually allowed both Google and Microsoft to sell and rent the film electronically, leading to a $15 million opening and the most successful digital movie release of all time.
In
North Korea, Kim Jong-Un's government has set up a "task force" to
prevent the movie—which depicts Jong-Un's death in somewhat graphic
form—from entering the country. But they aren't worried about electronic
versions of the film making their way to North Korea: Instead,
dissidents and defectors are expected to float in pirated versions of
"The Interview" on DVD attached to balloons. Now, that's a fun new kind
of black market.
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