North Korea experienced a widespread Internet outage on Monday, less than a week after the FBI accused the country of
being behind the hack that forced Sony Pictures to cancel the release
of 'The Interview.' The Internet blackout began sometime Monday morning
Eastern Time, a U.S. official confirmed to NBC News. Two U.S. officials
denied any U.S. involvement in the outage. It was not immediately clear
what had caused the outage, which came after President Barack Obama
promised that the United States would "respond proportionally" to what
he said on Sunday was an "act of cybervandalism."
The hack of Sony
Pictures by a group calling itself the "Guardians of Peace," or GOP,
forced the studio to cancel the planned Christmas release of the
action-comedy, which centers around a plot to assassinate North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un. While North Korea's elite might be affected by the
outage, most of the country's citizens don't have access to the Internet.
DYN Research conducts Internet performance tests around the world. It
noticed the problem when it could no longer connect to North Korean
websites. "It seemed like in the last 24 hours it was getting
progressively worse until it went offline," Doug Madory, director of
Internet analysis at DYN Research, told NBC News. "That means that
nobody in the world can send any Internet traffic to North Korea, and
they can't send anything out."
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