Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Friday, December 26, 2014

Experts: North Korea did not hack Sony, studio insider Lena may have

The FBI just last week confirmed what many Americans already assumed to be a forgone conclusion when they revealed there was conclusive evidence that North Korea's government was behind the hacking of Sony, an attack the government bureau said was carried out as a way 'to inflict significant harm on a U.S. business and suppress the right of American citizens to express themselves.'

Then, in a press conference on Friday, President Obama not only attacked North Korea and leader Kim Jong-un for their attempts to 'intimidate' Americans through their actions, but went so far as to warn the country that America would retaliate in response their actions.

Almost immediately the North Korean leader issued a statement denying involvement and demanding an apology from the United States for their 'evil doings.'

And while that apology is probably never coming, it seems that Kim Jong-un may be right, at least according to numerous cybersecurity experts and hackers who have come forward to not only point out the flaws in the FBI's investigation, but also possibly reveal the identity of the culprit.

More

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I believe it was probably done by our own President Obama. Just saying.

Anonymous said...

It was done by Sean Hannity so he could make a fool of himself by equating this pos movie to patriotism - what a tool.

Anonymous said...

I never believe what our government tells us anymore. The truth will come out eventually, but don't bet the farm on anything you get from the government or its agencies.

Anonymous said...

It was all a Hollywood stunt to sell more tickets for a zero interest movie, and the Dumbass-in-chief fell for it.

Another embarassment for our Country.

Anonymous said...

I doubt North Korea could hack my sons Xbox !

Anonymous said...

I normally ignore issues like this because 7 years of deception has numbed me to it.However,when the desired public outrage was not achieved the next poke in the ribs was "We're going to blow up the White House if the movie is released",or something to that effect.These accusations will be far more provoking to North Korea than any movie could ever be.

Anonymous said...

I felt that all along. map