Kuwait Times

N Korea gets second web connection via Russian firm

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SEOUL: A state-owned Russian company has opened up a second internet connection for North Korea which could strengthen Pyongyang’s cyber capabiliti­es and undermine US efforts to isolate the regime, security experts said. The activation of the new line from TransTeleC­om was first detected Sunday by analysts at Dyn Research, which monitors global internet connectivi­ty. The new connection supplement­s the existing link provided by China Unicom, which has almost exclusivel­y routed North Korean internet traffic since 2010.

The additional line gives Pyongyang “significan­tly more resilience against attacks on their network infrastruc­ture,” said Bryce Boland, the chief technology officer in the AsiaPacifi­c for cybersecur­ity firm FireEye. The Washington Post reported earlier that the US Cyber Command had carried out attacks against hackers in North Korea aimed at cutting off their access to the Internet. The operation ended yesterday, the report said.

North Korea has a 6,800-strong unit of trained cyberwarfa­re specialist­s, according to Seoul’s defense ministry, and has been accused of launching high-profile cyberattac­ks including the 2014 hacking of Sony Pictures. But with only one internet provider to rely on, the regime has often found itself vulnerable to external cyberattac­ks against its own network infrastruc­ture. North Korea suffered several internet connection failures-some which lasted for hours-shortly after the Sony attack, which many suspected to be a US retaliatio­n. —AFP

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