North Korea denies involvement in WannaCry cyberattack | Inquirer News

North Korea denies involvement in WannaCry cyberattack

/ 01:47 PM October 31, 2017

North Korea has slammed Britain for accusing it of being behind a global ransomware attack that hit the National Health Service, calling the allegation a “wicked attempt” to further tighten international sanctions against Pyongyang.

A third of Britain’s public hospitals were affected by the WannaCry worm in May, according to a government report.

Up to 300,000 computers in 150 countries were hit by WannaCry, which seized systems and demanded payment in Bitcoin to return control to users.

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Some researchers have pointed the finger at Pyongyang, saying that the code used was similar to past hacks blamed on Kim Jong-Un’s regime.

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British Home Office minister Ben Wallace told the BBC last week that London was “as sure as possible” that North Korea was responsible.

But a spokesman for the North’s Korea-Europe Association denied the accusations and warned Britain against “groundless speculation.”

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“This is an act beyond the limit of our tolerance and it makes us question the real purpose behind the UK’s move,” he said, in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency late Monday.

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“The moves of the UK government to doggedly associate the DPRK with the cyberattack cannot be interpreted in any other way than a wicked attempt to lure the international community into harboring greater mistrust of the DPRK,” the spokesman said, using the initials of the North’s official name.

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According to the South Korean government, the North has a 6,800-strong unit of trained cyberwarfare specialists. It has been accused of launching high-profile cyberattacks, including the 2014 hacking of Sony Pictures.

Experts say the North appears to have stepped up cyberattacks in recent years in a bid to earn hard foreign currency in the face of tougher United Nations sanctions imposed over its nuclear and missile programs.

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TAGS: Britain, Crime, Cyberattack, hacking, Health, Internet, North Korea, WannaCry

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