Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Korea. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Korea. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 4, 2013

PSY hopes N Korea loves new song

SKOREA-ENTERTAINMENT-MUSIC-PSY

"Gangnam Style" star Psy poses at a press conference before his concert in Seoul. Source: AFP

SOUTH Korean rapper PSY says he hopes North Koreans will enjoy his new single even as tensions remain high.

PSY released his latest single, Gentleman, in 119 countries on Friday, hoping to replicate the success of Gangnam Style, the smash YouTube hit that made him an international star almost overnight last year.

The choreography for Gentleman - including the "arrogant dance," as PSY called it - was unveiled at a concert in Seoul on Saturday before more than 50,000 fans. The music video has been uploaded onto YouTube.

PSY, whose real name is Park Jae-sang, said on Saturday that he regretted the current tensions between the two Koreas. The situation has been grabbing global headlines, with North Korea becoming increasingly belligerent with war rumblings, leaving its neighbors wary of a possible missile test by Pyongyang.

"It's a tragedy. We are the only countries divided right now," PSY said at a news conference ahead of the concert.

North and South Korea, which are divided by heavily fortified borders, are technically still at war, with the 1950-53 Korean War ending with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

PSY said he hoped North Koreans would enjoy his new music. He said his job was to make all people, including North Koreans, laugh.

"Hopefully my 'Gangnam Style,' my 'Gentleman,' my music videos and my choreography ... they might enjoy them too," he said.

When the Gangnam Style video went viral last year, it spun legions of parodies. Even North Korea's government created a parody video of the hit, showing that the secretive country is well-versed in South Korean popular culture. North Korea used its Gangnam Style parody to criticize Park Geun-hye, then the presidential candidate for South Korea's ruling party. Park was inaugurated as South Korea's new president in February.

PSY's Gangnam Style video, featuring his much-mimicked horse-riding dance, made him one of the best-known Koreans in the world. It's the most watched video of all time on YouTube, gathering more than 1.5 billion views since its release in July.

PSY acknowledged that the massive success of Gangnam Style added to the pressure as he worked on his latest single, but he said he tried to remain true to himself and his Korean roots.

"I tried to find Korean words that people from any country can easily sing along," he said of Gentleman, which contains lyrics both in English and Korean. PSY co-composed the music and wrote the lyrics, which poke fun at a self-claimed gentleman who enjoys his time at a dance club.

Audiences have questioned whether PSY will be a one-hit wonder known only for "Gangnam Style." But the South Korean musician, whose humble personality has endeared him to his fans at home since he made his debut more than a decade ago, shrugs off the skepticism.

"Whether or not a couple of my songs become a global hit, I've been doing this job for 12 years," PSY said. "I will bring more Korean dance moves and Korean songs overseas."


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Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 4, 2013

Hackers attack N Korea news website

Kim Jong-un

Anonymous hackers appeared to have posted this picture to the Flickr page of of Uriminzokkiri, which distributes news and propaganda from the North's state media. Source: Supplied

ACTIVIST hackers appear to have infiltrated North Korea's official news website and its accompanying Twitter and Flickr feeds, posting unflattering images of leader Kim Jong-Un.

The China-based website of Uriminzokkiri, which distributes news and propaganda from the North's state media, was inaccessible and its companion feeds attacked and defaced.

On Twitter, the Uriminzokkiri account's profile photo was changed to one of a couple dancing the Tango, and a series of tweets read "Hacked" and "Tango Down".

The male dancer was wearing a Guy Fawkes mask -- a trademark of the "Anonymous" hacktivist group.

The website's Flickr page showed a number of images, including one which simply read "We Are Anonymous" and a mock-up "Wanted" poster featuring Kim with a pig's nose and ears and a Mickey Mouse tattoo on his chest. The poster claimed the UN had offered a $1 million reward for Kim's capture due to his "threatening world peace" and wasting money while people starve to death".

Uriminzokkiri is best known for posting propaganda videos excoriating the United States and including images like the White House framed in the crosshairs of a sniper's rifle sight.

The attack came amid soaring military tensions on the Korean peninsula with Pyongyang, Seoul and Washington engaged in a bout of high-stakes brinkmanship.

Kim Jong-un

More detail of the Anonymous "Wanted" poster.

It also followed a major cyber attack that crashed the computer networks at South Korean TV broadcasters and banks last month and was widely blamed on North Korean hackers.

North Korea appears to have moved a medium range missile capable of hitting targets in Sth Korea and Japan.


View the original article here

Hackers attack N Korea news website

Kim Jong-un

Anonymous hackers appeared to have posted this picture to the Flickr page of of Uriminzokkiri, which distributes news and propaganda from the North's state media. Source: Supplied

ACTIVIST hackers appear to have infiltrated North Korea's official news website and its accompanying Twitter and Flickr feeds, posting unflattering images of leader Kim Jong-Un.

The China-based website of Uriminzokkiri, which distributes news and propaganda from the North's state media, was inaccessible and its companion feeds attacked and defaced.

On Twitter, the Uriminzokkiri account's profile photo was changed to one of a couple dancing the Tango, and a series of tweets read "Hacked" and "Tango Down".

The male dancer was wearing a Guy Fawkes mask -- a trademark of the "Anonymous" hacktivist group.

The website's Flickr page showed a number of images, including one which simply read "We Are Anonymous" and a mock-up "Wanted" poster featuring Kim with a pig's nose and ears and a Mickey Mouse tattoo on his chest. The poster claimed the UN had offered a $1 million reward for Kim's capture due to his "threatening world peace" and wasting money while people starve to death".

Uriminzokkiri is best known for posting propaganda videos excoriating the United States and including images like the White House framed in the crosshairs of a sniper's rifle sight.

The attack came amid soaring military tensions on the Korean peninsula with Pyongyang, Seoul and Washington engaged in a bout of high-stakes brinkmanship.

Korean website twitter hack

On Twitter, the Uriminzokkiri account's profile photo was changed to one of a couple dancing the Tango, and a series of tweets read "Hacked" and "Tango Down".

It also followed a major cyber attack that crashed the computer networks at South Korean TV broadcasters and banks last month and was widely blamed on North Korean hackers.

Kim Jong-un

More detail of the Anonymous "Wanted" poster.

North Korea appears to have moved a medium range missile capable of hitting targets in Sth Korea and Japan.

Korean website twitter hack

On Twitter, the Uriminzokkiri account's profile photo was changed to one of a couple dancing the Tango, and a series of tweets read "Hacked" and "Tango Down".


View the original article here

Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 3, 2013

Four excellent pictures from North Korea

HERE are some photos of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspecting various things - a waterslide, a computer, high-powered binoculars - with various military personnel.

Because, frankly, they're excellent.

We've captioned each photo and we'd like you to take your best shot.

Even Supreme Leaders need waterslides.

Leave your comments and suggestions below.


View the original article here

North Korea training thousands of hackers

South Korea believe hacking attack originated in North Korea. Julie Noce reports.

INVESTIGATORS have yet to pinpoint the culprit behind a synchronized cyberattack in South Korea last week.

But in Seoul, the focus remains fixed on North Korea, where South Korean security experts say Pyongyang has been training a team of computer-savvy "cyber warriors'' as cyberspace becomes a fertile battleground in the standoff between the two Koreas.

Malware shut down 32,000 computers and servers at three major South Korean TV networks and three banks last Wednesday, disrupting communications and banking businesses, officials said.

The investigation into who planted the malware could take weeks or even months.

South Korean investigators have produced no proof yet that North Korea was behind the cyberattack, and on Friday said the malware was traced to a Seoul computer.

But South Korea has pointed the finger at Pyongyang in six cyberattacks since 2009, even creating a cyber security command centre in Seoul to protect the Internet-dependent country from hackers from the North.

It may seem unlikely that impoverished North Korea, with one of the most restrictive Internet policies in the world, would have the ability to threaten affluent South Korea, a country considered a global leader in telecommunications.

North Korea South Korea Computer Crash

North Korean students surf the Internet at a computer terminal inside a computer lab at Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang. North Korea is training an army of "cyber warriors" to hack systems in South Korea and the US, say experts. File image: P Photo/David Guttenfelder

The average yearly income in North Korea was just $1190 per person in 2011 - just a fraction of the average yearly income of $22,200 for South Koreans that same year, according to the Bank of Korea in Seoul.

But over the past several years, North Korea has poured money and resources into science and technology.

In December, scientists succeeded in launching a satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket from its own soil. And in February, North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test, its third.

"IT'' has become a buzzword in North Korea, which has developed its own operating system called Red Star.

The regime also encouraged a passion for gadgets among its elite, introducing a Chinese-made tablet computer for the North Korean market. Teams of developers came up with software for everything from composing music to learning how to cook.

But South Korea and the U.S. believe North Korea also has thousands of hackers trained by the state to carry its warfare into cyberspace, and that their cyber offensive skills are as good as or better than their counterparts in China and South Korea.

South Korea Computer Crash

South Korean computer researchers check the computer servers of Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) as a police officer from the Digital Forensic Investigation watches at the Cyber Terror Response Center at the National Police Agency in Seoul after a synchronized cyberattack which Seoul has blamed on North Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)

"The newest addition to the North Korean asymmetric arsenal is a growing cyber warfare capability,'' James Thurman, commander of the U.S. forces in South Korea, told U.S. legislators in March 2012.

"North Korea employs sophisticated computer hackers trained to launch cyber-infiltration and cyber-attacks'' against South Korea and the US.

In 2010, Won Sei-hoon, then chief of South Korea's National Intelligence Service, put the number of professional hackers in North Korea's cyber warfare unit at 1000.

North Korean students are recruited to the nation's top science schools to become "cyber warriors,'' said Kim Heung-kwang, who said he trained future hackers at a university in the industrial North Korean city of Hamhung for two decades before defecting in 2003.

He said future hackers also are sent to study abroad in China and Russia.

In 2009, then-leader Kim Jong Il ordered Pyongyang's "cyber command'' expanded to 3000 hackers, he said, citing a North Korean government document that he said he obtained that year.

North Korea South Korea Computer Crash

North Koreans work at computer terminals inside the Grand People's Study House in Pyongyang, North Korea. Investigators have yet to pinpoint the culprit behind a synchronized cyberattack in South Korea but in Seoul, the focus remains fixed on North Korea. File image: AP /David Guttenfelde

The veracity of the document could not be independently confirmed.

Kim Heung-kwang, who has lived in Seoul since 2004, speculated that more have been recruited since then, and said some are based in China to infiltrate networks abroad.

What is clear is that "`North Korea has a capacity to send malware to personal computers, servers or networks and to launch DDOS-type attacks,'' he said. "Their targets are the United States and South Korea.''

Expanding its warfare into cyberspace by developing malicious computer codes is cheaper and faster for North Korean than building nuclear devices or other weapons of mass destructions.

The online world allows for anonymity because it is easy to fabricate IP addresses and destroy the evidence leading back to the hackers, according to C. Matthew Curtin, founder of Interhack Corp.

Thurman said cyberattacks are ``ideal'' for North Korea because they can take place relatively anonymously. He said cyberattacks have been waged against military, governmental, educational and commercial institutions.

South Korea Computer Crash

Employees react at the newsroom of the all-news cable channel YTN as the broadcaster's computer network was paralysed in Seoul.

North Korean officials have not acknowledged allegations that computer experts are trained as hackers, and have refuted many of the cyberattack accusations. Pyongyang has not commented on the most recent widespread attack in South Korea.

In June 2012, a seven-month investigation into a hacking incident that disabled news production system at the South Korean newspaper JoongAng Ilbo led to North Korea's government telecommunications center, South Korean officials said.

In South Korea, the economy, commerce and every aspect of daily life is deeply dependent on the Internet, making it ripe grounds for a disruptive cyberattack.

In North Korea, in contrast, is just now getting online. Businesses are starting to use online banking services and debit cards have grown in popularity.

But only a sliver of the population has access to the global Internet, meaning an Internet outage last week - which Pyongyang blamed on hackers from Seoul and Washington - had little bearing on most North Koreans.

"North Korea has nothing to lose in a cyber battle,'' said Kim Seeongjoo, a professor at Seoul-based Korea University's Department of Cyber Defense.

"Even if North Korea turns out to be the attacker behind the broadcasters' hacking, there is no target for South Korean retaliation.''


View the original article here

Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 3, 2013

North Korea training thousands of hackers

South Korea believe hacking attack originated in North Korea. Julie Noce reports.

INVESTIGATORS have yet to pinpoint the culprit behind a synchronized cyberattack in South Korea last week.

But in Seoul, the focus remains fixed on North Korea, where South Korean security experts say Pyongyang has been training a team of computer-savvy "cyber warriors'' as cyberspace becomes a fertile battleground in the standoff between the two Koreas.

Malware shut down 32,000 computers and servers at three major South Korean TV networks and three banks last Wednesday, disrupting communications and banking businesses, officials said.

The investigation into who planted the malware could take weeks or even months.

South Korean investigators have produced no proof yet that North Korea was behind the cyberattack, and on Friday said the malware was traced to a Seoul computer.

But South Korea has pointed the finger at Pyongyang in six cyberattacks since 2009, even creating a cyber security command centre in Seoul to protect the Internet-dependent country from hackers from the North.

It may seem unlikely that impoverished North Korea, with one of the most restrictive Internet policies in the world, would have the ability to threaten affluent South Korea, a country considered a global leader in telecommunications.

North Korea South Korea Computer Crash

North Korean students surf the Internet at a computer terminal inside a computer lab at Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang. North Korea is training an army of "cyber warriors" to hack systems in South Korea and the US, say experts. File image: P Photo/David Guttenfelder

The average yearly income in North Korea was just $1190 per person in 2011 - just a fraction of the average yearly income of $22,200 for South Koreans that same year, according to the Bank of Korea in Seoul.

But over the past several years, North Korea has poured money and resources into science and technology.

In December, scientists succeeded in launching a satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket from its own soil. And in February, North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test, its third.

"IT'' has become a buzzword in North Korea, which has developed its own operating system called Red Star.

The regime also encouraged a passion for gadgets among its elite, introducing a Chinese-made tablet computer for the North Korean market. Teams of developers came up with software for everything from composing music to learning how to cook.

But South Korea and the U.S. believe North Korea also has thousands of hackers trained by the state to carry its warfare into cyberspace, and that their cyber offensive skills are as good as or better than their counterparts in China and South Korea.

South Korea Computer Crash

South Korean computer researchers check the computer servers of Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) as a police officer from the Digital Forensic Investigation watches at the Cyber Terror Response Center at the National Police Agency in Seoul after a synchronized cyberattack which Seoul has blamed on North Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)

"The newest addition to the North Korean asymmetric arsenal is a growing cyber warfare capability,'' James Thurman, commander of the U.S. forces in South Korea, told U.S. legislators in March 2012.

"North Korea employs sophisticated computer hackers trained to launch cyber-infiltration and cyber-attacks'' against South Korea and the US.

In 2010, Won Sei-hoon, then chief of South Korea's National Intelligence Service, put the number of professional hackers in North Korea's cyber warfare unit at 1000.

North Korean students are recruited to the nation's top science schools to become "cyber warriors,'' said Kim Heung-kwang, who said he trained future hackers at a university in the industrial North Korean city of Hamhung for two decades before defecting in 2003.

He said future hackers also are sent to study abroad in China and Russia.

In 2009, then-leader Kim Jong Il ordered Pyongyang's "cyber command'' expanded to 3000 hackers, he said, citing a North Korean government document that he said he obtained that year.

North Korea South Korea Computer Crash

North Koreans work at computer terminals inside the Grand People's Study House in Pyongyang, North Korea. Investigators have yet to pinpoint the culprit behind a synchronized cyberattack in South Korea but in Seoul, the focus remains fixed on North Korea. File image: AP /David Guttenfelde

The veracity of the document could not be independently confirmed.

Kim Heung-kwang, who has lived in Seoul since 2004, speculated that more have been recruited since then, and said some are based in China to infiltrate networks abroad.

What is clear is that "`North Korea has a capacity to send malware to personal computers, servers or networks and to launch DDOS-type attacks,'' he said. "Their targets are the United States and South Korea.''

Expanding its warfare into cyberspace by developing malicious computer codes is cheaper and faster for North Korean than building nuclear devices or other weapons of mass destructions.

The online world allows for anonymity because it is easy to fabricate IP addresses and destroy the evidence leading back to the hackers, according to C. Matthew Curtin, founder of Interhack Corp.

Thurman said cyberattacks are ``ideal'' for North Korea because they can take place relatively anonymously. He said cyberattacks have been waged against military, governmental, educational and commercial institutions.

South Korea Computer Crash

Employees react at the newsroom of the all-news cable channel YTN as the broadcaster's computer network was paralysed in Seoul.

North Korean officials have not acknowledged allegations that computer experts are trained as hackers, and have refuted many of the cyberattack accusations. Pyongyang has not commented on the most recent widespread attack in South Korea.

In June 2012, a seven-month investigation into a hacking incident that disabled news production system at the South Korean newspaper JoongAng Ilbo led to North Korea's government telecommunications center, South Korean officials said.

In South Korea, the economy, commerce and every aspect of daily life is deeply dependent on the Internet, making it ripe grounds for a disruptive cyberattack.

In North Korea, in contrast, is just now getting online. Businesses are starting to use online banking services and debit cards have grown in popularity.

But only a sliver of the population has access to the global Internet, meaning an Internet outage last week - which Pyongyang blamed on hackers from Seoul and Washington - had little bearing on most North Koreans.

"North Korea has nothing to lose in a cyber battle,'' said Kim Seeongjoo, a professor at Seoul-based Korea University's Department of Cyber Defense.

"Even if North Korea turns out to be the attacker behind the broadcasters' hacking, there is no target for South Korean retaliation.''


View the original article here

Thứ Năm, 7 tháng 3, 2013

Pirate Bay's new home... Nth Korea!

Rodman

Like we weren't going to run this picture of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hugging former NBA star Dennis Rodman in Pyongyang again. Source: AFP

  • North Korea - the new home of The Pirate Bay?
  • Kim Jong-un welcomes file downloading site
  • Pirate Bay to "fight our battles from their network"

THE Supreme Leader has been a busy, busy man.

Second, his wife secretly gave birth. Apparently. Who knew she was pregnant?

And now he's extended a warm welcome to the beleaguered hosts of The Pirate Bay, the world's most notorious file-sharing platform, to set up shop in North Korea.

The Pirate Bay is the "largest bit Torrent tracker in the world", which essentially means it's a site that allows users around the world to make millions upon millions of illegal downloads.

The Pirate Bay has been fighting battles from European governments. It shut down in Sweden last week and moved to Norway and Spain.

But a copyright group in Norway is making life difficult, hence the desire to move to pastures new.

And that "pasture" is... Pyongyang? Come for the internet connection, stay for the tourist attractions.

"Today we can reveal that we have been invited by the leader of the republic of Korea, to fight our battles from their network," the Pirate Bay wrote on its blog.

"This is truly an ironic situation. We have been fighting for a free world, and our opponents are mostly huge corporations from the United States of America, a place where freedom and freedom of speech is said to be held high.

"At the same time, companies from that country is chasing a competitor from other countries, bribing police and lawmakers, threatening political parties and physically hunting people from our crew. And to our help comes a government famous in our part of the world for locking people up for their thoughts and forbidding access to information."

First of all, it's probably not really "ironic". That's just a popular word.

Secondly, NORTH KOREA.

Finally, it could be a hoax to drum up publicity and/or throw the wolves off the scent. We'll have to wait and see.


View the original article here

Pirate Bay's new home... Nth Korea!

The film about about the founders of the file-sharing site 'The Pirate Bay', will be released for free online. Release date to be announced Jan 2013

Retired U.S. basketball player Dennis Rodman, famed for his tattoos and piercings, arrived in Beijing Friday after four days in North Korea where he met with reclusive leader Kim Jong-un. Mana Rabiee reports.

Rodman

Like we weren't going to run this picture of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hugging former NBA star Dennis Rodman in Pyongyang again. Source: AFP

  • North Korea - the new home of The Pirate Bay?
  • Kim Jong-un welcomes file downloading site
  • Pirate Bay to "fight our battles from their network"

THE Supreme Leader has been a busy, busy man.

First, he hosted former NBA All-Star Dennis Rodman. The pair watched basketball, hugged it out, and generally struck up a bromance not seen since Rodman filmed Double Team with Jean-Claude Van Damme.

Second, his wife secretly gave birth. Apparently. Who knew she was pregnant?

And now he's extended a warm welcome to the beleaguered hosts of The Pirate Bay, the world's most notorious file-sharing platform, to set up shop in North Korea.

The Pirate Bay is the "largest bit Torrent tracker in the world", which essentially means it's a site that allows users around the world to make millions upon millions of illegal downloads.

The Pirate Bay has been fighting battles from European governments. It shut down in Sweden last week and moved to Norway and Spain.

But a copyright group in Norway is making life difficult, hence the desire to move to pastures new.

And that "pasture" is... Pyongyang? Come for the internet connection, stay for the tourist attractions.

"Today we can reveal that we have been invited by the leader of the republic of Korea, to fight our battles from their network," the Pirate Bay wrote on its blog.

"This is truly an ironic situation. We have been fighting for a free world, and our opponents are mostly huge corporations from the United States of America, a place where freedom and freedom of speech is said to be held high.

"At the same time, companies from that country is chasing a competitor from other countries, bribing police and lawmakers, threatening political parties and physically hunting people from our crew. And to our help comes a government famous in our part of the world for locking people up for their thoughts and forbidding access to information."

First of all, it's probably not really "ironic". That's just a popular word.

Secondly, NORTH KOREA.

Finally, it could be a hoax to drum up publicity and/or throw the wolves off the scent. We'll have to wait and see.

Retired U.S. basketball player Dennis Rodman, famed for his tattoos and piercings, arrived in Beijing Friday after four days in North Korea where he met with reclusive leader Kim Jong-un. Mana Rabiee reports.


View the original article here