Internet connectivity to North Korea was restored Friday after a
day-and-a-half-long outage that the country's official media blamed on
international hacking.
Connections to the Star, North Korea's sole Internet service
provider, hit problems on Wednesday when websites became inaccessible
from outside the country. The sites remained largely offline throughout
the incident, although occasionally made brief returns.
North Korea doesn't have much in the way of Internet connectivity and
there is little redundancy in its connection. Its main connection runs
via China Unicom in neighboring China, and there is also a back-up
satellite Internet connection via Intelsat. The country has just 1,024
IP (Internet protocol) addresses, making its national network more like
that of a medium-sized company than an entire country.
Only a few thousand people are estimated to have direct Internet
access -- mainly high-ranking government officials and scientists -- and
the country has only a handful of public websites. Most of them carry
propaganda from the state-run news media. The vast majority of the
country has access to a nationwide intranet, which runs on the same
technologies as the global Internet but has no connectivity outside of
the country.
Renesys, a company that analyzes global Internet connectivity, said
it first observed problems at 1 a.m. GMT on Wednesday. That would have
been 10 in the morning in Pyongyang. Connectivity was largely lost for
about 36 hours and returned late Thursday local time, although wasn't
back to normal until Friday, according to Renesys data.
North Korea's state-run media was silent about the outage while it
was under way, although on Friday the official Korean Central News
Agency came out swinging against the U.S. and its allies. It said the
outage was due to an "intensive and persistent virus attack," although
offered no further details.
"The DPRK will never remain a passive onlooker to the enemies' cyber
attacks that have reached a very grave phase as part of their moves to
stifle it," it said, using the official name for the country, The
Democratic Peoples' Republic of Korea.
Such bluster is typical of attacks on the U.S. in state-run media outlets.
The outage came against the backdrop of heightened tension on the
Korean peninsula. The recent imposition of additional sanctions on the
country by the United Nations Security Council and annual war games
between the U.S. and South Korean forces have led the DPRK to threaten
retaliation.
Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com
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