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Security

S. Korea Claims N. Korea Has Trained 600 Crackers 535

maggeth writes "The Financial Times is reporting that North Korea's military and intel services have trained as many as 600 computer hackers specifically for attacks against South Korea, Japan, and the US. South Korea claims that the north has a five-year university program for hacker training and cites recent attacks on government computer systems. The South Korean defense ministry claimed in the report that 'North Korea's intelligence warfare capability is estimated to have reached the level of advanced countries,' and that the caliber of the North's hackers is high. So far it appears that these specific attacks are based in China, although it is not clear if North Korea is using Chinese networks or if China is involved."
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S. Korea Claims N. Korea Has Trained 600 Crackers

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  • by mind21_98 ( 18647 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:29AM (#10437579) Homepage Journal
    I seem to think N. Korea's using this as a tool to gain leverage in talks. Then again, if they do have six hundred trained people ready to conduct cyberwarfare and have no qualms doing it, we could very well be screwed. In any case, it's probably not in their best interest to go through with it.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:37AM (#10437603)
      North korea may have 600 highly trained crackers, but we have slashdot, and the power of FIFTY THOUSAND CLICKS per link. If that can't bring an entire country down within a few days, nothing will.
    • This report could also come from Microsoft public relation who' claim it's not their products which are not sure but rather some malicious hackers trained to break into them...
    • by killapenguin ( 776995 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:42AM (#10437623)
      Why wouldn't they go through with an attack? A cyber-attack has the benefits of causing no bloodshed but could potentially cause anything from a minor headache to millions (if not billions) of dollars in damages if launched properly.

      Also, it's pretty interesting that the attacks on S. Korean computer systems seemed to be based in China. If this were indeed true (doubtful), this would cast doubt on dubbya's assertion in the debate that bilateral talks with N. Korea will alienate China, which is supposedly imposing some kind of leverage on N. Korea.
    • In any case, it's probably not in their best interest to go through with it.

      Yes. I'm in Vietnam and the quality of their comrades here is nothing to be frightened of.

      Key word is "trained". Trained by whom? You're not going to learn much when you don't have the equipment, you're hungry, and you have to spend six hours a day in political indoctrination classes.

      Anyone with talent *and* internet access will be busy looking over their shoulders because they'll naturally be on the "highly susupicious" list at the Ministry of Culture. And they'll want to devote at least of few hours' worth of that talent to making some extra cash to make sure their families can put an extra cabbage in the pot.

      Then remember it'll be easy to know which direction to look for these hackers. The only place a North Korean hacker is not going to stick out, or the only place he can afford to live, is China.

      This article is just trying to scare us. They had nothing better to write about. Nothing to worry about; nothing to see here.
      • Not quite the article, but perhaps North Korea itself is using this as a FUD tool. I saw it yesterday on NHK news, so it should be an official statement from South Korea...
        • If you ask me this claim about "North Korea has trained 600 EVIL AND SKILLED HACKERS OMG RUN FOR YOUR LIVES! is in the same category as the infamous story about How Saddam has bought 4000 new Playstations so his scientists can construct the MEGA BOMB*.

          Both stories are guaranteed to go all the way around the world becauase of their newsworthiness. They are both impossible to verify. Both caters to technology fear and fears about "what will the dangerous future bring".
          So I belive that both stories are pro

      • by Riktov ( 632 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @07:30AM (#10437911) Journal

        Anyone with talent *and* internet access will be busy looking over their shoulders because they'll naturally be on the "highly susupicious" list at the Ministry of Culture

        In the DRPK annyone with internet access at all is already part of the state's techno elite and de facto an agent.

        The only place a North Korean hacker is not going to stick out, or the only place he can afford to live, is China.

        Why not South Korea or Japan? And goverment agents can probably afford to live anywhere.

      • One of the major expenses the N. Korean gov. has is supporting it's military - 3rd largest standing army in the world, and they're actively building/developing weapons, such as nuclear missiles. It's not that the whole country is poor and so people are starving. The country is starving b/c huge amounts of money are poured into the military.

        And don't think that N. Korean agents just hang out there. They spread out. N. Korea has been known to kidnap foreign nationals (Japanese, for instance) to train their a
    • something doesn't seem right, a hackers university? i mean how would the computer labs ever work there ???

      "nearly 300 South Korean government computers ... were infected with viruses capable of stealing passwords and other sensitive information."

      really? millions of computers are infected with viruses worldwide, all i see from this is a lack of south korea administrators. It's obvious that in a country where every house has broadband the levels of virus infections would be higher than the rest of the wor
      • by maxwell demon ( 590494 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:15AM (#10437720) Journal
        A good strategy for south korea would be to actually educate its people on the use and the dangers of internet.

        Maybe this is the true aim. You know, people are morer willing to learn about and take security measures if there's some concrete threat, at best from a "known evil". A general "it's dangerous in the woods" is far less likely to be successful than "in the woods there are wild animals which will kill you", let alone "you know, in the woods there's that wulf which already has killed someone, and there's a whole pack of other wolves as well"
    • "...we could very well be screwed."

      And how can we be screwed? Pray tell. Do those hackers have magical powers or something? Do you think they can take out the internet permanently with clever VB viruses? Or DOS attacks? Do you think that those hackers can social engineer their way into getting US government/corporate passwords/manuals?

      I doubt it. Any attack they make will only make the internet stronger and more resilient. Besides, it's the virus of the mind N Korea should be worrying about. Just you wa

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:29AM (#10437581)
    South Korea has started training cookies to counter the NK threat.
    • Yeah, I knew I should have studied in North Korea.
      Forget binary trees and linked lists. Lets get straight to studying MS buffer overload vulnerabilities and haxor tactics...

  • Interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ncaraballo ( 708896 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:30AM (#10437584)
    Interesting since they seem to lack alot of technology up there. Have you seen satellite pictures? Seoul looks like L.A. while North Korea is pitch black. A very poor and low tech country last I heard.
    • Yeah? I saw a web site where a guy was travelling around taking pictures. Can't find it now, sorry. But anyway, they went to a school and found a big computer lab. All the machines were running Windows, by the way. English versions.
    • Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by millwall ( 622730 )
      Interesting since they seem to lack alot of technology up there. Have you seen satellite pictures? Seoul looks like L.A.

      Intereting that you use L.A. as an example of how a high tech area looks like.

      The first time I went to L.A. I was surprised how low tech the area looked like to me, especially with regards to the electricity and telephone lines blocking the view of the sky and the lack of modern public transport.
    • You are, of course, talking complete rubbish. Just because a city pollutes the night sky with stray photons doesn't mean it's full of high-tech wizardry. In fact, if so-called high-tech wizards were as good as they like to think they are, they'd be able to come up with a way to provide sufficient illumination on the ground without lighting up the entire hemisphere in the process.

      There is another theory that states that this has already happened. ;-)

  • Huh? (Score:4, Funny)

    by shutdown -p now ( 807394 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:32AM (#10437587) Journal
    Crackers? You mean, the guys sit there and undermine US economy by cracking and distributing warez?
  • by rock_climbing_guy ( 630276 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:35AM (#10437596) Journal
    Which is better:

    A: to be able to have a hundred or so crackers attack a web site at your demand or

    B: to be able to publish an article linking to them and therefore slashdot their communications into oblivion?

  • Check the source! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by barcodez ( 580516 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:36AM (#10437600)
    The source of the story is the South Korea's defence ministry, sworn enemy of North Korea. They know this will worry western govts and so turn them further against NK. What reason do we have to believe this story? FUD, FUD, FUD.
    • Could well be you are right, but, as the saying goes "just because you are paranoid, it doesn't mean they're not out to get you." No?
    • Hey. Finally the use of the word FUD in its true meaning. Didnt expect to live to see the day :)
    • Just beacuse we've heard how Kim Jong Il II, the leader of N. Korea, while playing golf for the FIRST time, shot around 5 (FIVE!!!) holes in one for a total score of around 38 UNDER PAR, doesn't mean that we shouldn't believe anything that they say.
  • Hacked by Koreans (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CdBee ( 742846 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:37AM (#10437604)
    This may be purely coincidental, but some months ago a friend pointed me toward the official website of North Korea out of amusement (its very much a dictatorial-regime website)

    Seconds he and I both received warnings from our firewalls that we were under attack by a variety of means. The originating IP addresses were in Seoul.

    Based on that, I wonder if the South Koreans have/had compromised a North Korean web-server.
  • Poor guys (Score:4, Funny)

    by mkro ( 644055 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:38AM (#10437605)
    They will be SO dissapointed when they discover that the rest of the world has upgraded from Win95, and winnuke.exe does not work anymore.
  • by Underholdning ( 758194 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:41AM (#10437617) Homepage Journal
    You don't need 600 persons to commit cyber crime. You need one script kiddie with 600.000 zombie windows machines, since I reckon the most effective type of eWAR is ddos. Hacking one machine isn't nearly as effective as nuking an entire infrastructure using a distributed dos.
    • Hacking one machine is very effective/"important" if that machine contains the location of your enemys secret army stations, war strategy, new weapons research result, etc. etc.
    • Just as a point of reference, 600k Windows zombies can push, in sum with 100% efficiency, about 17GB/s. That sounds like an awful lot, but the data center where I work can nearly do that. Furthermore, 600k home computers users with broadband is a lot. It can take over 24 hours to nmap 700 computers on a LAN, and you'd have to cast a truly enormous net: to infect 600k computers you'd probably need to scan twice that many; and to get that many actual computers, you'd have to scan - being somewhat optimisti
  • I'll take this story with a grain of salt :)

  • Five years? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Inda ( 580031 ) <slash.20.inda@spamgourmet.com> on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:44AM (#10437629) Journal
    I thought all this hacking stuff was learned in a few weekends and evenings using sites like astalavista..?

    Jokes aside,... No I have one more.

    Judging from the Koreans I've met playing online games, maybe 1 year is spent learning-to-hack; the other 4 are spent learning the social skills needed to relieve passwords by means of human to human attacks.
  • by tod_miller ( 792541 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:47AM (#10437639) Journal
    One of thier applicants that only *just* made it through:

    (mildly edited for 14mn3ss filterz_)

    i would ;liock to join youre 733t gorup oF computer lAmErZ 4nd do 733T thins liek scrpit \/irusez and talk to chiX0rs uin funjny ways!!!! MY MUN SAYS IT IS OK, AND CAN I ALS0 SEUR NETWROK TO DONW7OAD NAUGHTY MOVEIS,, tnx b ill

    courtesy of http://rinkworks.com/dialect/

    Original [interesting]:

    I would like to join your elite group of computer people and do elite things like script viruses and talk to girls in funny ways. My mum says it is ok, and can I also use your network to download naughty movies.

    thanks

    bill
  • Scary (Score:3, Interesting)

    by codepuke ( 737720 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:50AM (#10437646)
    This is an incredibly interesting avenue. If an 18-year-old script kiddie could write MSBLASTER, just imagine what 600 of North Korea's best could do. I guess this could be considered a miniature version of our NSA, all be it controlled by the world's worst dictator. I think this calls for the US to get serious about consumer electronic security, mandating smart cards for online banking etc. Let's not make it easy for them...
    • I know that there needs to be a dramatic increase in computer security in the US. Rather than force Americans to pay extra for smart cards, why not start by having the US banking officials require that internet connected ATMs not run unpatched versions of MS Windows? Or require that all PCs sold in the US that are sold with an OS be sold with a secure OS?
    • Re:Scary (Score:3, Insightful)

      by stephanruby ( 542433 )
      Why mandate anything? The banks that have insecure systems will bear the cost of their insecure systems. And the merchants that accept insecure paiments with delivery addresses to South Korea will also bear some of that cost. There is no need to panic.
  • Yawn. (Score:4, Funny)

    by salvorHardin ( 737162 ) <adwulf@@@gmail...com> on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:51AM (#10437647) Journal
    Reminds me of a similar thing in NTK [ntk.net] a while back.

    > DISABLE ECONOMY
    > You cannot do that here.
    > EXAMINE CYBER INFRASTRUCTURE
    > Access Denied.
    > HIT ECONOMY WITH STICK

    • Another link to ntk.net that I was just on a second ago before reading this:

      http://www.ntk.net/ballmer/mirrors.html :-)

      Steve 'Monkey Boy' Ballmer [please news-wires, use his official title!]
  • by caluml ( 551744 ) <slashdot@spamgoe ... minus herbivore> on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:51AM (#10437650) Homepage
    Bit self defeatist, isn't it? Now, should anything happen, the main internet links between NK and the rest of the world will "accidentally" be damaged, and magically all the problems will stop. Does anyone know of a site that lists all the ranges by country? I started to do it, but the RIPE whois server blocked me :\
    • OK, OK. So far it appears that these specific attacks are based in China. Doh.
    • Firstly, it isn't that simple, as the whole point of the internet was that you could nuke certain parts of it, but basically, it would still continue to function. So you cut the link to China/North Korea, or you blackhole the address range. So they route out via someplace else.
  • by Konster ( 252488 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @05:55AM (#10437662)
    If they start hacking us, we will cut their phone line, this rendering their sole 300-baud modem useless.

  • In capitalist USA (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Eudial ( 590661 )
    Hackers train THEMSELVES!
  • by Jacek Poplawski ( 223457 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:09AM (#10437701)
    Someone asked here "is there North Korea Linux Group". This is interesting question. I am active member of ORKUT. I was really suprised when someone from Iran added me as friend. I was even more suprised when I realized how many people from Iran are in Orkut. Country which is called "part of Axis of Evil" has Free Internet Access - greatest invention ever. What about North Korea? Nothing. There are no people from N.Korea in Internet. You can find official websites or information about N.Korea, but you can't concact with anyone. You can't talk with people from N.Korea. It is one big prison. Even Iran is heaven in compare to N.Korea.
    • by ghostlibrary ( 450718 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @08:18AM (#10438140) Homepage Journal
      > I was even more suprised when I realized how many people from Iran are in Orkut.

      Or how many sponsors of the Anasair X-Prize were Iranian, for that matter (the Ansaris are Iranian!) Guess the axis of evil 'accidentally' sponsored the first commercial astronaut in the US. How... evil?
    • by KjetilK ( 186133 ) <kjetil AT kjernsmo DOT net> on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @12:03PM (#10440329) Homepage Journal
      Well, yes, Iran has probably among the more vibrant blogging communities in the world. I follow a few Iranian blogs regularily. Hoder [hoder.com] is a good starting point. And authorities are cracking down on it, pissing all the kids off. Iran is strange, on one hand, the majority of the people are highly educated, they understand democracy, and there are lots of good people in higher positions, in universities, for example. So, if one were to start a democratic revolution in the Middle East, what one should do is start cooperation with the progressive forces in Iran. Contrary to Iraq, you could actually come with a lot of support to people without aiding the mullahs. A good example of this is the CERN /Iran collaboration [europhysicsnews.com]. With these forces gaining status and strength in society, a peaceful transition to democracy would be imminent. Many of these leading figures is of the clear opinion [hoder.com] that current US policy has been a severe setback.
  • In other news... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by retards ( 320893 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:10AM (#10437704) Journal
    Iraq has weapons of mass destruction according to former exiles now running the country.

    This is just FUD by South Korea against it's arch enemy, and even if it isn't, so what? How many crackers are employed by the CIA? The Mossad? MI5? Or even the RIAA & MPAA?

    It amazes me that the general public of Western countries and their allies are so goddamn afraid that these absolutely piece of shit countries that can't even feed their own populace are any threat to anyone save mentioned populace.

    ANY Western country could kick serious ass in Afghanistan, Iraq or North Korea (though not with zero casualities). These countries have no tech. None. How hard is it to drop fire one 'soldiers' with AK-47s and sandals?

    They are the human wool pulled over our eyes to keep us from looking at our own corrupted civilzation and political system.

    Rant over.
    • by feepcreature ( 623518 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:57AM (#10437814) Homepage
      There seems to be a lot of staggering naivity about the capabilities of nations poorer than the USA.

      Sanctions may make it harder for the man in the street to buy computing equipment, but they cannot stop a determined state form getting what is so widely available in the rest of the world. So if North Korea wants hacking hardware, they can get it.

      It doesn't really matter how poor the average person is, or how little food or power or money most groups have - if something is important to a dictatorship (like their own personal comfort, or security) it can be generously resourced. Think Saddam's palaces. So they can afford to train to hack.

      Don't underestimate educational possibilities. Quality of education has very little to do with GNP - look at the dire state of public schools in the US. Training of the elite can be very effective in less rich countries - the most important thing is usually motivation. Actually, the US system also shows that resources CAN be concentrated to produce pockets of excellence! So if NK wants effective training, it's hardly impossible.

      So they could train and resoure a significant number of hackers, if they wanted. The casual complacency of some here reminds me of the attitude of the WWII British in Singapore - just before the Japanese Army cycled round the back of the fortifications and invaded.

      On the other hand, North Korea may not have done any of that. Or they may have tried, and been ineffective (though you don't have to be THAT good, to crack lots of systems). It's prudent to take precautions, but daft to panic.

      As with any security question, consider what is the problem, whether the solution fixes it, what are the disadvantages of the solution, and whether the tradeoff is worth it. Most sensible precautions are already known - to sensible users and not a few slashdotters ;-)

      And it's also worth looking at where the story came from, and when. Just because it's a South Korean defence agency doesn't make it untrue (they are in a better position to understand local threats than many outsiders). And the North is ratcheting up tension, by refusing talks. But beware of spin - both from those releasing the stoy, and those who want a pretext for new "security" measures...

      • > Sanctions may make it harder for the man in the street to buy computing equipment, but they cannot stop a determined state form getting

        Yep. Sanctions (or blowing up power plants during war, et cetera) basically just mean "the populace suffers more, while the army still takes first pick of the resources".

        Heck, even in the US currently, military funding is considered seperate from all other programs, and usually passed by Congress as a seperate budget item (often ignoring the rest of the economic pict
    • by Echnin ( 607099 ) <{p3s46f102} {at} {sneakemail.com}> on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @07:08AM (#10437840) Homepage
      I think the US would not succeed in a land war in North Korea. A major reason they have so many poor is that military spending is so high; 33.9% of GDP. This is over 10 times as much as the US. Of course, considering their GDP is about 1000th of what the US GDP, this may not seem like a huge amount. But it still remains a fact that North Korea has the fourth largest army in the world, with 1.2 million men. The US has 1.4 million. They have a bit of outdated equipment, but they have plenty of fully-working tanks, artillery and APCs. You think the US stands a chance in a land war? You already lost to them once.

      But the real question is, why would the US want to invade North Korea? They are showing signs of accepting a free market economy -- some areas have been designated as special free market zones, and this may spread throughout the rest of the country. Sure, they're far behind, but they can drag themselves out of this mess.

      • by Dusabre ( 176445 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @08:24AM (#10438174) Homepage
        33% of shit still means shit. An Aegis costs as much as North Korea's military budget. 70's artillery, infantry and fighting vehicles are worthless against the US military machine which is built around smashing artillery, infantry and fighting vehicles. Saddam had better equipment in '91 and '03 than North Korea has in '04. He also had the 3rd/4th largest army in '91. He got creamed.

        Problem with the US army is that it can't fight insurgents and doesn't want to learn how. As an aside, the moment that the military started boasting about bodycounts, I knew the insurgency was winning. The military should be boasting about how many guerillas didn't appear and weren't killed, rather than how many grabbed guns with glee and got bombed (along with civilians), dying in glee (going to heaven...).

        The US (as part of the UN) fought China and North Korea to a standstill. Only Chinese intervention saved North Korea - at the point a million Chinese 'volunteers' intervened, more than 90% of North Korea was occupied by US/UN troops.

        North Korea is accepting a market economy to the same degree that Castro is a nice guy whose only vice is smoking cigars. Believe it and you're believing the complex lies of a regime who only excels in lies.
        • by Anonymous Coward
          Dude, they can wax Seol in an hour. There isn't enough high tech shit to stop them.

    • How hard is it to drop fire one 'soldiers' with AK-47s and sandals?

      I am not a soldier (at least not a professional one), but last time I checked there were still some 'soldiers with AK-47s' around Baghdad.
    • These countries have no tech. None. How hard is it to drop fire one 'soldiers' with AK-47s and sandals?

      You're right General! That worked amazingly well in Vietnam! The US really kicked that backwards low tech piece of shit country didn't it! The first war on Iraq kept them quiet FOREVER! Heck, everything is under control in Iraq and Afghanistaneven as we speak!

      It is very difficult for an army that uses conventional tactics and tries to be mindful of the Geneva Convention and the Rules of Engagement to

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:18AM (#10437725)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by killbill! ( 154539 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:35AM (#10437764) Homepage
    It is a criminal organization that happens to control a territory and exploit starving slaves.

    It routinely abducts Japanese and South Korean citizens just to keep NK spies trained (Kim, a movie buff, also had a director kidnapped so he could direct movies for his own enjoyment!).
    Moreover, NK is the world's largest counterfeit money manufacturer and a major drug manufacturer. Oh, and it's into exporting weapons and missiles, too.

    It is not only into illegal exports. It's also into massive-scale blackmail. It's been into nuclear blackmail for quite some time. Turning to cyber-blackmail was only a logical step.
    When one is desperate for money, any buzzword-compliant threat will do.

    This is not a country. This is SPECTRE.
    Maybe the CIA should start training killer angora cats ;p
  • by MachDelta ( 704883 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @06:51AM (#10437808)
    AOL is now being formally recognized by world governments as a modern military superpower. Claiming to have a lineup of over 10,000 highly trained "leet hackers", AOL claims it has enough digital firepower to "out-haxx0r" any country on the planet. Tensions are sure to rise among world leaders as they take action in this suprising turn of events.
    When reached for comment, George W. Bush was quoted as saying "Well gee them AOL folks rilly seemed nice, what with sendin out em free CDs 'n such, but I guesses, I mean I supposes if they was rilly just a new kinda technuh... technuh... nucular, uh, nucular-logical warfare device - yi'see like a weppin o' mass destrucshun 'n such - then I spozes we're gonna hav'ta bomb the livin daylights outta em varmints."

    Elsewhere in the world, France has surrendered and is to be re-named "LOLOLOLOLOLOMG111`". When asked how the newly conquored country would be managed, AOL spokespersons simply pointed out that a small council would be appointed, comprised of the following individuals: :D, ;), ^_^, :P, :X, and o_O.


    More news as it unfolds.
  • the north has a five-year university program for hacker training

    Do you think I could get a grant [esn.org]?

  • -wonder if this heavy North Korean presence on the scene might explain all the lousy english spelling we see from the "h@X0r" crowd.
  • by Jakhel ( 808204 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @08:55AM (#10438312)
    UN: What happen ?
    South Korea: Somebody set up us the bomb.
    South Korea: We get signal.
    South Korea: What !
    UN: Main screen turn on.
    South Korea: It's You !!
    North Korea: How are you gentlemen !!
    North Korea: All your base are belong to us.
    North Korea: You are on the way to destruction.
    South Korea: What you say !!
    North Korea: You have no chance to survive make your time.
    North Korea: HA HA HA HA ....
  • by div_2n ( 525075 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @08:59AM (#10438329)
    Just a couple of days ago I received a few phishing e-mails disguised to look like CitiBank e-mails that pointed to servers based in China. The e-mails originated from China as well. I even did some of the work for the FBI and sent full registration info for those IP addresses.

    I was quite disappointed when I tried to report it to the FBI and I got what was clearly and automated response that said, "This is not an automated response."

    Also recently I was privy to a situtation where a computer in a school system was acting VERY strange and typing text in Word on its own that seemed half gibberish and half not but with text that could almost be confused for terrorist communications. The school system called the FBI and gave them the IP of the machine. The FBI said they were monitoring it to try to determine the cause. The only problem? It was a private IP address and impossible to monitor remotely.

    I understand that the FBI probably guessed (quite correctly IMO) that the computer was infected with one of the new worms that uses the dictation engine, but they told the school they were monitoring which was a lie. Additionally, they sent me an e-mail that said it wasn't automated when it so clearly was. No wonder we had intelligence failures leading up to 9/11.
  • by BMcWilliams ( 621149 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @09:46AM (#10438656) Homepage
    South Korea has regularly issued warnings [wired.com] like this since 1994. What the South Korean government fails to note is that its own military has nearly 200 "computer training facilities" and had trained more than 200,000 "information technicians." What's more, because North Korea's IT infrastructure is very centralized, it's particularly vulnerable to physical attacks.
  • In the US (Score:3, Funny)

    by xtheunknown ( 174416 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @10:05AM (#10438837)
    In the US we have millions of crackers. They don't even need training. Wait, you meant the "other" type of cracker.

    Never mind.
  • by mikeee ( 137160 ) on Tuesday October 05, 2004 @10:24AM (#10439039)
    If you haven't seen this, have a look; it reads like an overblown parody of 1984, but it's real.

    Korean Central News Agency of Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea [kcna.co.jp]

    Any government that can publish this with a straight face needs to be overthrown... :(

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

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