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posted by n1 on Thursday January 08 2015, @12:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the numbers-don't-lie dept.

The New York Times is reporting the FBI's director is publicly stating that the bureau has no doubt the North Koreans are behind the Sony hacking attack:

James B. Comey, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said on Wednesday that no one should doubt that the North Korean government was behind the destructive attack on Sony’s computer network last fall.

Mr. Comey said he had “high confidence” in the F.B.I.’s quick determination that North Korea was behind the attack. He said skeptics in the Internet security world who have suggested other theories for who was responsible did not have all the information he does.

The F.B.I. director said national security concerns limited just how far law enforcement officials could go in revealing evidence that points to North Korea. But at a conference on cybersecurity in New York, Mr. Comey offered some of the evidence the F.B.I. had found.

One of the telltale pieces of evidence, he said, were a few I.P., or Internet Protocol, addresses that could be traced directly to North Korea. Mr. Comey said members of the group claiming responsibility for the hacking — Guardians of Peace — did a good job concealing their identities but slipped up in some cases.

"They used proxy servers to disguise” the trail of evidence, Mr. Comey said. “But sometimes they got sloppy.”

Should we believe him? After all, he is the FBI director, not exactly a source of truthful information.

 
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  • (Score: 1) by Synonymous Homonym on Tuesday January 13 2015, @12:25PM

    by Synonymous Homonym (4857) on Tuesday January 13 2015, @12:25PM (#134345) Homepage

    You do realise that there is a almost certainly difference between crossing a firewall inbound and outbound though, right?

    Yes. Outbound is usually easier, and often the only way.

    You're still missing my point though, which is that the FBI's supposed evidence is *still* entirely unsubstantiated

    No, I'm with you on that.
    And I would be very surprised if the network infrastructure of North Korea wasn't at least partially undermined by the NSA.
    Which would make a convincing false flag very easy.