BREAKING THE MOLD: NORTH KOREA IS UNLIKELY TO BE BEHIND THE WANNACRY ATTACK
Contents
The U.K. Cyber Strategy and Minimizing the Impact of Cybersecurity Incidents
Cybereason XDR supports the U.K. Cybersecurity Strategy objective of minimizing the impact of cybersecurity incidents...
Ross Rustici
December 19, 2017 | 7 minute read
After the WannaCry attack, we published a blog post that used sound logic, technical evidence and historical context to explain why the North Korean regime – despite tentative links by security companies – was not likely behind WannaCry. Months later, we still stand by this claim: The North Korean government probably did not carry out WannaCry.
The point we made in our May blog post, which we’ve re-published here, are still valid. Spreading FUD does little to keep anyone safe or de-escalate the threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and cyber program.
On December 18, 2017, U.S. Homeland Security Advisor Thomas P. Bossert asked the entire world to trust the U.S. government’s assertion that North Korea was behind May’s WannaCry …
Cybereason XDR supports the U.K. Cybersecurity Strategy objective of minimizing the impact of cybersecurity incidents...
Ross Rustici
December 19, 2017 | 7 minute read
After the WannaCry attack, we published a blog post that used sound logic, technical evidence and historical context to explain why the North Korean regime – despite tentative links by security companies – was not likely behind WannaCry. Months later, we still stand by this claim: The North Korean government probably did not carry out WannaCry.
The point we made in our May blog post, which we’ve re-published here, are still valid. Spreading FUD does little to keep anyone safe or de-escalate the threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and cyber program.
On December 18, 2017, U.S. Homeland Security Advisor Thomas P. Bossert asked the entire world to trust the U.S. government’s assertion that North Korea was behind May’s WannaCry …