Did North Korea attack U.S. government websites?

Wed Jul 8, 2009 5:42PM EDT

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Over the Fourth of July holiday, some 35 government web sites in the U.S. and South Korea were hit with a relatively crude weapon known as a denial of service attack -- one designed to take a website offline rather than to steal confidential information.

Stateside, a variety of sites were knocked out completely, including the web sites for the Treasury Department, the Secret Service, Federal Trade Commission, and the Transportation Department. Homeland Security and the FAA were also impacted, and some remained intermittently unavailable well into this week. Some South Korean sites, which were hit later, remain offline as I write this.

Now suspicion is being leveled at North Korean agents as the perpetrators of the attacks. South Korean investigators even believe the attacks were potentially carried out at the "organization or state" level, implying the attack may have been, for lack of a better phrase, an official act of cyberwar.

American experts aren't so sure, saying that misdirection is commonplace in attacks like this, and that it would be an obvious move for another enemy operator to attack South Korean sites alongside U.S. ones in order to trick investigators into thinking the attack had originated from South Korea's arch-enemy. "In the dozens of instances that I worked over the past decade, I cannot recall a single instance in which someone intending to attack came from the source it appeared to have come from," offered one former intelligence officer in the Washington Post story linked above.

Meanwhile, an official U.S. investigation is continuing into the source of the attacks, but so far nothing has been confirmed.

Whomever the culprit, the attack methodology used was a rather archaic one. Computerworld notes that the attack software used was a variant of the malware application MyDoom, an email worm originally spread in January 2004. (It was the fastest-spreading virus ever in its day.) The latest version now comes loaded with the malicious software needed for the infected PC to attack a target website. At some point, the command is given by the virus's creator to activate and begin the attack. The virus is also reportedly written to allow the attackers to change targets as they see fit.

Scary time to be operating a major government regime, I guess...

Comments on Did North Korea attack U.S. government websites?

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  • 6 Posted by texasjeepguy@sbcglobal.net on Thu Jul 9, 2009 7:39AM EDT Report Abuse

    Chris, there is something screwy going on with the comments on your blogs. If you click on "Next", it sends you to the comments of another blog topic. Al

  • 7 Posted by charlotte_rhoda on Thu Jul 9, 2009 8:01AM EDT Report Abuse

    They are asking for trouble from the United States. No, they are begging.

  • 8 Posted by pkflorian@ameritech.net on Thu Jul 9, 2009 1:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    Rivas, a rock thrown through my window is a "archaic" attack but that doesn't mean I will see who did it if they are gone before I look out the window. Just sayin'.

  • 9 Posted by ghutchcraft on Fri Jul 10, 2009 3:24AM EDT Report Abuse

    sinse the 5os thay have been very bad trouble makers in the world.not just us in the u.s.a. but south korea japan and anybody else thay can tri to insult.but be fare warned right now.that if you attack us with nukes we will vaperize your ass.there wont be e-nuff of you left to pick up with tweezers.some statments of great threat with nukes you are barking up the wrong tree mr.kim jung ill whatever your name is. glen hutchcraft

  • 10 Posted by imakeitrainy on Tue Jul 14, 2009 4:06AM EDT Report Abuse

    As long as I am concern every website can be hacked, as long as it is online...so american computers can hacked, cos americans gives out the tutorial to other countries...Fault from your end....no attack on america, cos i have never been there....God bless America, God bless Israel and God bless Nigeria and God bless me.

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