Justice Department Announces Actions to Combat North Korean Remote IT Workers

justice.gov

49 points by mooreds a day ago


ripped_britches - a day ago

You know what we should do is set up laptop farms and scam North Korean companies. We could infiltrate their largest 100 corporations and steal their assets. Does anyone have a link to top largest NK companies?

nerdjon - a day ago

This leads to some interesting questions. Were the people on the North Korean side working given access to more information about the world than the average citizen?

I would have to imagine they have to know more just to be able to interact normally with other people. I would think at some point in a meeting a casual conversation about current events would come up and if they did not know much about the outside world it would be a very weird (and likely raising some red flags) conversation.

Or were these interactions only ever over text, so no camera or anything which would help obfuscate that. It would also minimize the chance of there being those more causal human conversations.

maybemaybeezzzz - a day ago

It would be interesting to see how much of these folks accepted lower salaries than the other applicants. Then the justice system could maybe link the HR departments with fault as well.

hackable_sand - 15 hours ago

This is like the Iraqi WMDs of the white collar world.

2OEH8eoCRo0 - a day ago

They busted some North Korean IT workers but how will they prevent this in the future? What are US companies doing to protect themselves?

ChrisArchitect - a day ago

Misleading. Release from June.

Some discussion at the time:

US Government takes down major North Korean 'remote IT workers' operation

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44428422

throw83939449 - a day ago

[flagged]

ke9098 - a day ago

[flagged]

gaws - a day ago

Action comes after Bloomberg News reported[1] on this issue.

[1]: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2025-07-24/north-kor...