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North Korea Infiltrates U.S. Remote Jobs—With the Help of Everyday Americans
North Korea Infiltrates U.S. Remote Jobs—With the Help of Everyday Americans
A LinkedIn message drew a former waitress in Minnesota into a type of intricate scam involving illegal paychecks and stolen data Christina Chapman looked the part of an everyday American trying to make a name for herself in hustle culture. In prolific posts on her TikTok account, which grew to more than 100,000 followers, she talked about her busy life working from home with clients in the computer business and the fantasy book she had started writing. She posted about liberal political causes, her meals and her travels to see her favorite Japanese pop band. Yet in reality the 50-year-old was the operator of a “laptop farm,” filling her home with computers that allowed North Koreans to take jobs as U.S. tech workers and illegally collect $17.1 million in paychecks from more than 300 American companies, according to federal prosecutors. In a June 2023 video, she said she didn’t have time to make her own breakfast that morning—“my clients are going crazy,” she said. Then she describes the açaí bowl and piña colada smoothie she bought. As she talks, at least 10 open laptops are visible on the racks behind her, their fans audibly whirring, with more off to the side. In 2023, Christina Chapman posted a TikTok that had racks of laptops visible in the background. The Wall Street Journal highlighted the laptops in this clip of the video. Chapman was one of an estimated several dozen “laptop farmers” that have popped up across the U.S. as part of a scam to infiltrate American companies and earn money for cash-strapped North Korea. People like Chapman typically operate dozens of laptops meant to be used by legitimate remote workers living in the U.S. What the employers—and often the farmers themselves—don’t realize is that the workers are North Koreans living abroad but using stolen U.S. identities. Once they get a job, they coordinate with someone like Chapman who can provide some American cover—accepting deliveries of the computer, setting up the online connections and helping facilitate paychecks. Meanwhile the North Koreans log into the laptops from overseas every day through remote-access software. Chapman fell into her role after she got a request on LinkedIn to “be the U.S. face” for a company that got jobs for overseas IT workers, according to court documents. There’s no indication that she knew she was working with North Koreans.
·wsj.com·
North Korea Infiltrates U.S. Remote Jobs—With the Help of Everyday Americans
China admitted its role in Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure
China admitted its role in Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure
China admitted in a secret meeting with U.S. officials that it conducted Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure, WSJ reports. China reportedly admitted in a secret meeting with U.S. officials that it carried out cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure, linked to the Volt Typhoon campaign.
·securityaffairs.com·
China admitted its role in Volt Typhoon cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure
GTA 6 Hacker Arion Kurtaj Became a Legend Attacking Companies. Then His Rivals Attacked Him
GTA 6 Hacker Arion Kurtaj Became a Legend Attacking Companies. Then His Rivals Attacked Him
The City of London Police had put the teenage boy in the suburban Travelodge to protect him. They even set up a code with him and his mom to signal it was safe to open the door: “Lucky lucky.” Then they grew suspicious. The teen had a history with the police. It was September 2022, and 17-year-old Arion Kurtaj had been arrested twice earlier that year for his alleged role in a hacking group that stole data and demanded ransoms from some of the world’s biggest tech companies. Kurtaj, who is autistic, was released both times. The second time, that March, he had been let go under the condition that he stay offline.
·wsj.com·
GTA 6 Hacker Arion Kurtaj Became a Legend Attacking Companies. Then His Rivals Attacked Him
Critical Infrastructure Companies Warned to Watch for Ongoing Cyberattack
Critical Infrastructure Companies Warned to Watch for Ongoing Cyberattack
Hackers exploited a ‘zero-day’ flaw in Ivanti software to breach 12 ministries in Norway Norway’s security officials warned around 20 critical infrastructure companies, other businesses and public agencies in the country they might also be vulnerable to a cyberattack disclosed Monday that hit 12 government ministries.
·wsj.com·
Critical Infrastructure Companies Warned to Watch for Ongoing Cyberattack