(…) the internet went down across the country. A wave of cyberattacks left all systems on hold for more than seven days. First, the main national websites failed, from the official news site to the booking page of the national airline. Then, the Asian state’s connections with the rest of the world were interrupted. Emails could not be sent or received; there was no connection to cloud services. The blockade was complete.

    • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      What normal people hear: “He took down the routers with some crazy complicated algorithms. He’s Neo in the matrix.”

      What IT professionals hear: “He hired a bunch of people to keep sending spam letters to their tiny mailboxes until they were so stuffed that they couldn’t receive any legitimate mail.”

    • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      He rented all types of servers around the country in the cloud and designed a denial of service (DoS) attack

      doug-clap What a uniquely skilled individual!

      His feat did not go unnoticed. Over the next year he had meetings with officials from the United States Cyber Command, the branch of the armed forces dedicated to this field. He also met with officers from the Marines, the Space Operations Command and intelligence (NSA). Cáceres shared with them the keys to his successful operation and told them that, in his opinion, similar operations could be carried out with small commandos of two to four hackers. That would give them agility, autonomy and the ability to react.

      Me, a cyber-commando, dressing up in full tactical gear, ready for anything, for the trip from my gaming chair to my refrigerator to get beer while I watch my rented Azure servers send spam to a small country’s routers

      He tried, but failed. “To do anything you need authorization, which takes six months to get. And when you get it, what you wanted to do no longer works. That is the reality here in the U.S.: we have very, very good people working on our cyber defense, but they are hogtied. They can’t do anything, even though I know we have the resources to do a lot.”

      Smh our bureaucratic government won’t approve my request to start a war with the DPRK from my couch

      If he did this to any other small nation, especially a US-aligned one, he would be charged with a serious crime. The US can’t openly do electronic warfare but they can stand by and watch this clown do what basically amounts to cyber-terrorism, a least for a little while

      Anyway, now that he doxxed himself I hope the DPRK actually gives him something to fear lol

      Also

      And ever since he took down the internet in North Korea, he has also been approached by the National Security Agency (NSA). Everyone wanted to know how he did it.

      Lmao

      This is peak journalism, they obviously took him at his word

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    5 months ago

    Unless things have changed, North Korea doesn’t have a whole lot by way of Internet. I think they used to have two Class C netblocks, 256 IP addresses each.

    kagis.

    They’re apparently up to four.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_North_Korea

    As of February 2023 North Korea has four IPv4 subnets, all announced by AS131279, named “Ryugyong-dong”.[52] The subnets are:[53]

    175.45.176.0/24 (175.45.176.0–255)

    175.45.177.0/24 (175.45.177.0-255)

    175.45.178.0/24 (175.45.178.0–255)

    175.45.179.0/24 (175.45.179.0–255)

    The regime doesn’t like people having access to outside information.