![]() Unsurprisingly, the real-life Kim was not pleased with his Hollywood treatment-though it’s unclear whether he was more incensed by his fictitious death or the buffoonish treatment. As in most comedies, hijinks ensue, and eventually they complete their mission. The CIA then recruits Rogen’s and Franco’s characters to assassinate the North Korean leader by poisoning him. Sony’s The Interview is a middling comedy starring Seth Rogen and James Franco as a producer and journalist, respectively, who land an interview with the faux Kim Jong Un, played by Randall Park. In the case of the Sony attack, one of the regime’s earliest major hacking operations, Kim sought to avenge a personal slight. Occasionally, White observes, Pyongyang does use cyberattacks to terrorize targets for pettier reasons. “During peaceful times,” Thae says, “they can use their hacking ability to create income.” However, Thae also asserts that in wartime, they can “easily” conduct a cyberattack to harm South Korea. But in the book’s conclusion, White includes a warning from Thae Yong-ho, a former North Korean deputy ambassador in Britain, who defected to South Korea and is currently a legislator there. The illicit funds are used to fund everything from Kim Jong Un’s lifestyle to Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons and missile programs. National Security Agency, tells White that Pyongyang’s “strategy is about utilizing its asymmetric strengths, being able to find tools of national power that they can use to level the playing field against their much stronger adversaries in the West.”Įarly in the book, White also emphasizes that the main goal of North Korea’s hackers-like the counterfeiters before them-is to make cash for the regime, which has few legitimate opportunities to earn hard currency given the international sanctions due to Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs. ![]() Priscilla Moriuchi, a former analyst at the U.S. “Computer hacks have become a key weapon in North Korea’s arsenal, and they now pose a significant threat to global security and stability,” White writes. currency-increased the costs for North Korea and could explain its shift to cyberactivities. Bush administration’s efforts to stop the Kim regime’s illicit activities-counterfeit cigarettes, drugs, and U.S. Secret Service told a Senate subcommittee in 2006 that the Supernotes were first detected in 1989 and that it had seized approximately $50 million of the notes globally. An alternative explanation is that the Kim regime will always try to exploit the weakest point of the U.S. But White ties them together by explaining that currency counterfeiting was long a focus of Pyongyang’s illicit activities-and when the financial revolution moved transactions from physical currency to online banking, it set off a slew of North Korean cyberactivities. The connection between North Korea’s cyberactivities and fake $100 bills may not be obvious. $100 bills, also known as superdollars or Supernotes. White devotes an entire chapter early in the book to Pyongyang’s counterfeiting of U.S. The upshot is that “North Korea’s alleged computer hackers get away scot-free, while their accomplices (or some of them, at least) get caught in the net,” as White notes. law enforcement continues efforts to prosecute North Korean hackers-an admirable goal but extremely unlikely to happen-including the three North Koreans listed on the FBI’s Cyber’s Most Wanted list. ![]() Much of White’s book draws from information already in the public domain, but his compelling narrative highlights the trail of accomplices and victims that North Korea leaves behind. In particular, White comprehensively reviews the record of the North Korean hacking team code-named Lazarus Group by U.S. White’s engaging prose takes us around the world-Ireland, Macao, South Korea, Bangladesh, China, the Philippines, Slovenia, Malta, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States-to document Pyongyang’s cyber-intrusions and other illicit activities. The Lazarus Heist: From Hollywood to High Finance: Inside North Korea’s Global Cyber War, Geoff White, Penguin Business, 304 pp., $29.95, June 2022 ![]()
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