Man who briefly took down North Korea’s Internet posts on r/AMA, some of the questions include:

Would it be possible to hack their internet in such a way that you could have opened a pipeline from their limited NK-only intranet to the outside internet? Or is that so walled off that it wouldn’t be feasible? Giving citizens access to the outside world would be an interesting thing to see them deal with.

To which he answered:

That would be amazing. It’s definitely a huge goal of mine. I’d say it should be possible. But it may be somewhat difficult depending on their setup. From what i’ve seen they aren’t great at setting stuff up, so I’m absolutely going to try!

You allegdedly committed a cyber crime, and we’ve seen “good hackers” get punished for their good deeds before.
Do you have any concerns that you’ll be targeted by authorities?

To which he answered:

Actually the US government was far far more a concern than NK. However now I’ve done work in the space of sort of what they called “guerrilla/unconventional warfare” for folks in the DoD because of this. I’m also working with the folks that would be the ones arresting me and they gave me a nice unofficial commendation (a challenge coin if you’re familiar). I suppose there are other entities that could come after me but I think it’s tough to, I don’t know. But will there be a legal case of “North Korea vs P4x”? Who would take that on even! We don’t even consider NK a country, they’re a terrorist state officially. So I hit back at a bunch of terrorists that attacked me. I probably broke some international shit but 🤷.

Was there anything you learned about NK while you were bringing down the house?

To which he answered:

They suck at Internet. Their internet is little sticks and glue. Even better though, I learned they have only two routers of egress and ingress of the Internet. What I eventually ended up doing was focusing a lot of bandwidth on those routers . It took down all routing into and out of the country. Along with conventional DoS like memory exhaustion and just a lot of bandwidth hitting them, when those two routers came down it was game over.

It wasn’t just a DoS on their infra, it actually took down all routing. The errors people got were “there is no route to host” which was awesome to see honestly!

Those are only some of the comments, those that went against the narrative of “North Korea evil 1984” were expected ly downvoted.

  • 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml
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    5 months ago

    So according to the posts he spent $80,000 of his own money to buy cloud services, DoS 2 routers for a day, then is suprised the CIA didn’t hire him.

    • CCCP Enjoyer@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 months ago

      I should launch a website where you pay $5 USD for a single botnet instance to DDOS a rented VPS in the DPRK, for 5 minutes. All profits would secretly go to funding the DPRK’s missile program.