Los Angeles Times

A message from North Korea?

-

Re “Cyberattac­k experts see a link to North Korea,” May 16

The purpose of the recent ransomware attack that appears to have emanated from North Korea was clearly not to extort a few thousand dollars from the victims. One possibilit­y is that it was a threat, letting the world know that North Korea has the power to hold computer systems and economies hostage if they cross dictator Kim Jong Un.

A scarier possibilit­y is that this was a test, to see whether it is possible to prevent retaliatio­n in kind, by disabling communicat­ion and control systems in the event of a nuclear first strike by North Korea.

Either way, all countries, and the U.S. in particular, need to develop plans to protect themselves from cyberterro­rism. Now that North Korean missiles may be capable of reaching Alaska, the matter is urgent.

Eleanor Egan

Costa Mesa

As an IT guy, I clean up the messes others make. But why should our tax dollars go to a National Security Agency that hides system vulnerabil­ities from us and Microsoft because it thinks it can wreak havoc on only the bad guys?

The “WannaCry” malware got nowhere with my clients’ PCs because they paid extra for protection from just this sort of threat.

Not fair. Not smart. Not sustainabl­e.

Dan Henrickson

Los Angeles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States