Cyberattacks 'traced to North Korea'

On Facebook
Life & Style blogs

Online House Hunter: England’s most romantic places

Our Online House Hunter goes in search of romance this Valentine's Day...

Online House Hunter: Rugby – a Dickens of a town

Charles Dickens didn't think much of the railway town of Rugby in Warwickshire, calling it Mugby. Bu...

Online House Hunter: Mortgage relief

Banks would appear to be finally relinquishing their stranglehold on mortgages. Our Online House Hun...

The North Korean government was the source of high-profile cyberattacks in July that caused web outages in South Korea and the United States, news reports said.

North Korea immediately was suspected of involvement in the attacks but there has been little concrete evidence.



South Korean media reported at the time that North Korea runs an internet warfare unit that tries to hack into US and South Korean military networks to gather confidential information and disrupt service, and that the regime has between 500 and 1,000 hacking specialists.



Computer experts say the web attacks like those waged in July are not difficult to launch.



"Many different parties could pull this off. This was not a particularly complex ... attack to launch," Rod Beckstrom, former head of the National Cybersecurity Center in the U.S., said during a visit to Seoul on Friday.



"It's definitely credible that anyone who had $50 million or a quarter-million dollars or a fairly limited amount of funding could hire hackers to go and perpetrate such an attack," Beckstrom said.



Beckstrom was in the South Korean capital for a meeting of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, a US-based nonprofit organisation overseeing internet addresses that he heads.



North Korea could have launched the attacks in an attempt to "collect quality information" from the South or "to put psychological pressure on the South," said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University.



Ties between the two Koreas frayed after South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak took office last year pledging to get tough with nuclear-armed Pyongyang. However, inter-Korean ties have improved in recent months.

North Korea immediately was suspected of involvement in the attacks but there has been little concrete evidence.



South Korean media reported at the time that North Korea runs an internet warfare unit that tries to hack into US and South Korean military networks to gather confidential information and disrupt service, and that the regime has between 500 and 1,000 hacking specialists.



Computer experts say the web attacks like those waged in July are not difficult to launch.



"Many different parties could pull this off. This was not a particularly complex ... attack to launch," Rod Beckstrom, former head of the National Cybersecurity Center in the U.S., said during a visit to Seoul on Friday.



"It's definitely credible that anyone who had $50 million or a quarter-million dollars or a fairly limited amount of funding could hire hackers to go and perpetrate such an attack," Beckstrom said.



Beckstrom was in the South Korean capital for a meeting of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, a US-based nonprofit organisation overseeing internet addresses that he heads.



North Korea could have launched the attacks in an attempt to "collect quality information" from the South or "to put psychological pressure on the South," said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University.



Ties between the two Koreas frayed after South Korea's President Lee Myung-bak took office last year pledging to get tough with nuclear-armed Pyongyang. However, inter-Korean ties have improved in recent months.

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus

Day In a Page

Apple admits it has a human rights problem

Apple admits it has a human rights problem

After years of complaints and workers' suicides in China the technology giant faces up to the human cost of its gadgets
Peter Moore: 'I feel guilty I'm the only one alive'

Peter Moore interview

'I feel guilty I'm the only one alive'
Sellafield faces nuclear option as overspending threatens plant's future

Sellafield faces nuclear option

Overspending threatens plant's future
Israel blames Iran for embassy bomb attacks

Israel blames Iran for embassy bomb attacks

Tehran rejects Netanyahu's 'lies' after diplomats in India and Georgia targeted
Former manager enjoying Apoel crack at the big time

Tommy Cassidy interview

Former manager enjoying Apoel crack at the big time
James Lawton: Patience may not be a virtue this time, Roman – Andre Villas-Boas looks all at sea

James Lawton: AVB looks all at sea

Abramovich's visits to training reinforce the idea of a coach feeling pressure from above and below
The 10 Best sledges

The 10 Best sledges

Not all of them require snow...
Procrastination: Not now – I'm busy

Procrastination: Not now – I'm busy

Confronting the real reasons for puttting things off can help us beat it
Fun in the sunset years

Fun in the sunset years

A new movie follows retirees moving to India for low-cost care and a culture of respect for the elderly. For many Britons, it's already a reality
Picture preview: Lucian Freud drawings

Lucian Freud drawings

Picture preview
Silent revolution at the Baftas as the French take top awards

Silent revolution at the Baftas

The Artist wins in seven categories, with Meryl Streep the other big success story
Whitney Houston: The diva who had – and lost – it all

The diva who had – and lost – it all

Nick Hasted charts the highs and lows of Whitney Houston's life
How Picasso won over (some of) the British

How Picasso won over (some of) the British

Winston Churchill and Evelyn Waugh hated his work, but Picasso provided inspiration for a whole generation of UK artists
Topshop: A Decade Of Design

Topshop: A Decade Of Design

When London Fashion Week starts on Friday, Topshop will celebrate 10 years backing its brightest young stars
John Prescott: 'My wife thought I'd just retire, but I'm not a slippers man'

'My wife thought I'd just retire, but I'm not a slippers man'

At 73, John Prescott isn't mellowing. In fact he's taking a shot at becoming a police commissioner