North Korea’s U.S. cyber-attack

What we should do about the big attack—allegedly by Pyongyang—on U.S. and South Korean websites

Thursday, July 9, 2009
North Korea’s U.S. cyber-attack

Unidentified hackers used a computer worm to launch attacks on 26 websites in the US and South Korea beginning on July 4, 2009.

(ITAR-TASS/Corbis/Mashkov Yuri)

Best opinion: Foreign Policy, Time, Wired, Wash. Post

“Thousands of zombified computers” attacked at least 26 websites in the U.S. and South Korea, said Brian Fung in Foreign Policy, and South Korean intelligence is fingering North Korea. The cyber-attacks, which began July 4, at least temporarily shut down an impressive list of sites—at the White House, State Department, Secret Service, New York Stock Exchange, and other institutions. Cyberwarfare is no laughing matter.

If North Korea is behind the cyber-attacks, said Joe Klein in Time, maybe the U.S. should retaliate, to “demonstrate to other would-be perpetrators that we have sophisticated capabilities” at hand. Nothing too drastic—like we could “turn the electricity in Pyongyang on and off a few times, if we can do it.”

“Cooler heads” are pointing away from North Korea, said Kim Zetter in Wired, and toward “an unsophisticated hacker” using the 5-year-old MyDoom computer worm. Also, the 39 U.S. and South Korean sites were hit with “denial of service” attacks, among “the least sophisticated kinds of attack” out there and more a nuisance than a threat. The only reason this one “launched a thousand headlines” is its unusual duration and breadth.

That doesn’t change the underlying problem, that “we don’t have a coherent national cyberdefense,” said Alexandra Petri in The Washington Post. “Literally millions” of cyber-attacks are waged on U.S. systems each day—16,843 on U.S. government sites in 2008, and continual attacks on the private sector. We need a “cyber czar,” to make sure our scattered defenses are effective.

Show: Oldest | Newest

3 Comments

Posted by sa3, Thursday, July 9, 2009, 3:45 pm cyber czar yeah that sound like a kickass idea. All these czar have been so effective...

Posted by Rob, Thursday, July 9, 2009, 4:20 pm Bill Gates for cyber mogul.

Posted by Rocky Horror, Saturday, July 11, 2009, 1:52 am Joe Klein, stop being a nambypamby. Don't just turn off the lights for a few minutes to show the North Koreans and their dangerously unstable leader Kim Jung Il. Turn off all the electricity in their psycho leader's palace, and then turn on the gas. Then cause nuclear leaks that poison the entire nation. We're talking revenge, the sweetest reaction one can have.

Post a Comment

November 6, 2009

Newsletter

Sign up here for our daily newsletter

Privacy Policy | Sample Newsletter