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We Can Conclusively Confirm North Korea Was Not Behind Sony Hack

Hasbara Buster

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We Can Conclusively Confirm North Korea Was Not Behind Sony Hack

By Charles C. Johnson


December 28, 2014 "ICH" - "Gotnews" - Sony hack was an inside job

Gotnews.com can confirm that North Korea was not behind the Sony hack contrary to major media reports.

An investigation into the data shows that someone copied the released 200GB of data over 5-6 hours on the night of November 21st.




Based on the date time stamps of the released data the transfer speed is roughly in the range of 480Mbit/s which equates to USB 2.0.

We don’t know what time zone that time stamped data comes from. (The time is the mtime Unix Time format, local time of the machine. It’s not compensating for any time zone. It doesn’t know the time zone so if the computer is running from 10 pm to 2 AM at Sony Pictures Entertain in Los Angeles that means a potential hacker in Japan could be just ending the work day at 7 PM Tokyo time.)
The Guardians of Peace have also given an indication about their origins pushing against the North Korean narrative.

We are not Korean.

— Guardians of Peace (@GuardiansGOP) December 19, 2014

Our Gotnews.com investigation into the data that has been released by the “hackers” shows that someone at Sony was copying 182GB at minimum the night of the 21st–the very same day that Sony Pictures’ head of corporate communications, Charles Sipkins, publicly resigned from a $600,000 job. This could be a coincidence but it seems unlikely. Sipkins’s former client was NewsCorp and Sipkins was officially fired by Pascal’s husband over a snub by the Hollywood Reporter.
Two days later a malware bomb occurred.

We are left with several conclusions about the malware incident:

1. The “hackers” did this leak physically at a Sony LAN workstation. Remember Sony’s internal security is hard on the outside squishy in the center and so it wouldn’t be difficult for an insider to harm Sony by downloading the material in much the same way Bradley Manning or Edward Snowden did at their respective posts.

2. If the “hackers” already had copies, then it’s possible they made a local copy the night of the 21st to prepare for publishing them as a link in the malware screens on the 24th.
Sony CEO Michael Lynton’s released emails go up to November 21, 2014. Lynton got the “God’sApstls” email demand for money on the 21st at 12:44pm.

This tweet by an American fluent in Japanese was yet another indication that it was an insider at Sony but in Japan.

I know, nothing better to do than latch on to “God'sApstls” …a term that probably doesn’t exist in DPRK Korean.. but does in Japanese anime.

— Bad Uncle Leo (@z31r4m) December 21, 2014

The Guardians of Peace “hackers” sent a demand through a possibly spoofed gmail account–dfrank1973.david@gmail.com.



The dfrank1973 email is another tip off that the hacker is Japanese. Jerome D. Frank (the second edition of whose seminal work Persuasion and Healing was published in 1973) was a critic of nuclear weapons. Japan is the only country in the world to have been nuked. It is also the most likely country to be nuked if North Korea has its way.

It’s possible that hackers already had everything, were reading email, saw the public Sipkins resignation then pulled the trigger on the malware a few days later but it’s highly unlikely.

Gotnews.com has already reported from multiple sources that North Korea was likely not behind the Sony leak

 We Can Conclusively Confirm North Korea Was Not Behind Sony HackÂ
:Â Information Clearing House - ICH
 
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I'm getting convinced that the whole Sony is attacked by N. Korean hackers issue was a publicity stunt to attract attention for the piece of crap movie they've made.
 
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I'm getting convinced that the whole Sony is attacked by N. Korean hackers issue was a publicity stunt to attract attention for the piece of crap movie they've made.

How so? the box office receipts are about a tenth of what was expected so I doubt that.
 
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How so? the box office receipts are about a tenth of what was expected so I doubt that.

Hackers' threats can't stop crowds from flocking to see The Interview | Film | The Guardian

From Greenwich Village in Manhattan to Houston, Texas, Wayne, Michigan andSan Diego, the story was the same: people turned out in force to view a movie that only 10 days ago appeared likely never to be screened. Some came out of curiosity, some to be entertained, but for others the decision to see a film that has garnered a lacklustre 50% from critics on RottenTomatoes.com was a statement.

As the manager of Cinema Village in New York told the crowd at his venue: “Let freedom reign.”
 
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