The hacker collective Anonymous has said it has been “hacking” and vandalising social networking profiles linked to North Korea. The group has issued several warnings since the country’s threats have intensified.
Hackers forced, Uriminzokkiri, a news site offline – while Twitter and Flickr accounts have been breached.
Anonymous Hackers also claimed to have accessed 15,000 usernames and passwords from a university database.
As part of action which the loosely organised collective has called “Operation Free Korea”, the hackers have called for leader Kim Jong-un to step down, a democratic government to be put in place – and for North Koreans to get uncensored internet access.
Currently, only a select few in the country have access to the “internet” – which is more akin to a closed company intranet with only a select few websites that are government-run.
The country recently allowed foreigners to access mobile internet, but this service has since been shut off.
In a message posted online, members of Anonymous wrote: “To the citizens of North Korea we suggest to rise up and bring [this] oppressive government down!
“We are holding your back and your hand, while you take the journey to freedom, democracy and peace.
“You are not alone. Don’t fear us, we are not terrorist, we are the good guys from the internet. AnonKorea and all the other Anons are here to set you free.”
‘Tango down’
Urminzokkiri’s Twitter feed started displaying messages reading “hacked” at around 0700 BST. The account’s avatar was changed to a picture of two people dancing, with the words “Tango down”.
On Urminzokkiri’s Flickr photo page, other images, including a “wanted” poster mocking Kim Jong-un, were also posted.
Anonymous has posted what it said was a sample of the hacked information.
However, some have questioned the reliability of the details as some of the email addresses were in fact Chinese.
Also unreachable on Thursday was the website of Air Koryo, the country’s airline, which launched its online booking site late last year.
Like the main Urminzokkiri homepage, it is suspected the Air Koryo site has been hit with a Distributed Denial of Service attacked (DDoS) – a technique which involves flooding a website with too much traffic for it to handle.
Although a highly secretive nation, North Korea puts considerable effort into having a strong presence online.
Various YouTube accounts attached to the regime post news items and propaganda videos on a regular basis.
More Stories
Facebook Paying Social Media Users to Suspend Accounts Ahead of November Elections
Facebook is offering money to those who are willing to stop using Facebook and Instagram in the weeks before the...
Multiple nation-state groups are hacking Microsoft Exchange servers
Multiple government-backed hacking groups are exploiting a recently-patched vulnerability in Microsoft Exchange email servers. (more…)
The rare form of machine learning that can spot hackers who have already broken in – MIT Technology Review
Darktrace’s unsupervised-learning models sound the alarm before intruders can cause serious damage. — Read on www.technologyreview.com/s/612427/the-rare-form-of-machine-learning-that-can-spot-hackers-who-have-already-broken-in/
Hackers Delete Thousands of Dark Web Pages • Digit
Hackers have permanently deleted 6,500 hidden services that were hosted on the Daniel's Hosting dark web server. — Read on...
Mining Botnet Conscripts 5000 Android Devices
A fast-moving botnet that appeared over the weekend has already infected thousands of Android devices with potentially destructive malware that...
Surviving Electmageddon: Protecting against a wave of DNS outages
This is a re-print of an excellent article posted this week regarding setting up multiple DNS addresses. To protect...