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INTERNET SPACE
Sony's PlayStation 'gradually coming back'
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 27, 2014


N. Korea suffers another Internet shutdown: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Dec 27, 2014 - North Korea suffered an Internet shutdown for at least two hours on Saturday, Chinese state-media and cyber experts said, after Pyongyang blamed Washington for an online blackout earlier this week.

"At Pyongyang time 7:30 pm (1030 GMT) North Korea's Internet and mobile 3G network came to a standstill, and had not returned to normal as of 9:30 pm," Xinhua news agency reported.

Xinhua's reporters in North Korea found that the Internet was "very unstable" throughout the day, the report added.

Respected cyber security firm Dyn Research also said on Twitter that North Korea suffered a "country-wide Internet blackout" on Saturday.

North Korea earlier in the day called US President Barack Obama a "monkey" for inciting cinemas to screen a comedy featuring a fictional plot to kill its leader, and blamed Washington for an Internet blackout this week.

The isolated dictatorship's powerful National Defence Commission (NDC) threatened "inescapable deadly blows" over the film and accused the US of "disturbing the Internet operation" of North Korean media outlets.

The earlier Internet outage triggered speculation that US authorities may have launched a cyber-attack in retaliation for the hacking of Sony Pictures -- the studio behind madcap North Korea comedy "The Interview".

Washington has said the attack on Sony was carried out by Pyongyang.

Sony was still struggling Saturday to fully restore its online PlayStation system, three days after the Christmas day hack that also hit Microsoft's Xbox, reporting that services were "gradually coming back."

Meanwhile, Xbox was up and running except for three of its applications, following an allegedly coordinated attack that sent both companies scrambling.

PlayStation, whose support homepage reported that the system was still offline, tweeted Saturday that "PS4, PS3, and Vita network services are gradually coming back online - thanks for your patience."

A new Twitter user going by the name "Lizard Squad" took credit for the disruption, claiming it had the "nation on strings."

The name is the same used by a group of hackers that has targeted Sony in the past, though it was not possible to verify the Twitter account's authenticity.

The account did not return requests for comment and only became active Wednesday.

Sony had earlier this month been hit by a sophisticated hacking attack that stole massive amounts of data from its servers.

The US has blamed North Korea for the attack, with the reclusive state furious at the release of Sony film "The Interview," which parodies leader Kim Jong-Un.

After initially canceling the film's December 25 release, Sony backtracked and brought it out to a small number of US theaters.

The film was also made available online -- including through the Xbox console and, soon, the PlayStation.

However, analysts said a direct connection with the Sony Pictures attack was unlikely, and that the latest hack was probably the work of fame-seeking amateurs.

"The timing suggests that this is an attack that we can put in the category of adolescents who are looking for a bit of glory," said Pierre Samson of the European Circle Security and Information Systems.

"There is a very small probability that there was a direct link with the attack on Sony Pictures. You can order an attack to online services fairly easily with few resources."

He said thousands of similar hacks are launched daily, although they are not always effective.

- Gamers vent -

Though a direct connection between "The Interview" and the service disruptions could not be confirmed, some gamers were convinced a link exists.

"I blame that darn movie 'The Interview,'" wrote a user going by as2009man on a PlayStation community forum message board.

"It's the gift that keeps on giving."

Another poster to the same forum said he was getting fed up with the game world's vulnerability to repeated denial of service attacks.

"A DDos attack is like a semi (truck) driver intentionally jackknifing his rig on a busy interstate and shutting down traffic for a few hours," said a gamer writing under the name shadoefax.

Game users also took to Twitter to vent their frustration.

"After this christmas, #lizardsquad is forever on the naughty list," one frustrated gamer fumed.

A major cyber attack on PlayStation in 2011 saw personal details from 77 million customers stolen, preventing customers from playing online and forcing Sony to disable the network for more than three weeks.


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INTERNET SPACE
Web outage hardly stirs Internet-free N. Korea: experts
Seoul (AFP) Dec 24, 2014
North Korea's Internet went down this week after an apparent attack but most of its citizens will not have noticed the difference in a country that does its level best to seal off foreign influence, experts say. The mysterious blackout has hit the North since Monday night, after the US warned of a retaliation against Pyongyang's alleged hacking attack on Sony Pictures. Pyongyang is accus ... read more


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