Hello There, Guest! (LoginRegister)

Post Reply 
The Gargoyle apparently wants to start some S#%#^
Author Message
ETSUfan1 Offline
SoCon / ETSU Mod
*

Posts: 12,624
Joined: Apr 2005
Reputation: 93
I Root For: ETSU Football
Location: Abingdon, VA

Donators
Post: #21
RE: The Gargoyle apparently wants to start some S#%#^
Tiny madman threatens to wipe US off of the map.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090624/ap_o...as_nuclear
06-24-2009 07:11 PM
Visit this user's website Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
WoodlandsOwl Offline
Up in the Woods
*

Posts: 11,813
Joined: Jun 2005
Reputation: 115
I Root For: Rice Owls
Location:

New Orleans Bowl
Post: #22
RE: The Gargoyle apparently wants to start some S#%#^
(06-19-2009 12:51 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-19-2009 12:38 PM)I45owl Wrote:  
(06-19-2009 10:53 AM)Claw Wrote:  A satellite's movement is predictable. A rocket's is not. In this case, even the guys shooting the rocket aren't sure where it will go.

(?!)

Once it's up, the trajectory is very predictable.

Until fins start falling off and the ACS is out-of-control. 03-wink

Saddam's SCUDS had some of the same design characteristics of the NK short range ballistic missiles. They had parts falling off and/or failing because of aerodynamic structural failure giving the Patriot multiple targets to engage.
06-24-2009 07:41 PM
Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
WoodlandsOwl Offline
Up in the Woods
*

Posts: 11,813
Joined: Jun 2005
Reputation: 115
I Root For: Rice Owls
Location:

New Orleans Bowl
Post: #23
RE: The Gargoyle apparently wants to start some S#%#^
(06-24-2009 07:11 PM)ETSUfan1 Wrote:  Tiny madman threatens to wipe US off of the map.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090624/ap_o...as_nuclear

The Nokoies like to play asymmetric warfare. It doesn’t take a large nuclear warhead for an EMP Bomb, which would ruin Northwest Asia. Plus NK has some pretty good hackers.

"For the last five years, one of the enduring questions among computer security people was, "where are the mysterious, elite North Korean hackers?" For nearly two decades, the South Korean media has been reporting on the cyberwar capabilities of North Korea. All of this revolves around activity at Mirim College, a North Korean school that, since the early 1990s, has been training, for want of a better term, computer hackers. The story, as leaked by South Korean intelligence organizations, was that a hundred cyberwar experts were graduated from Mirim College each year. North Korea is supposed to have, at present, a cyberwar unit of nearly a thousand skilled hackers and Internet technicians. South Korean intelligence believes the North Korean have a unit of at least a hundred very good hackers who have been ordered to scout out the South Korean government and military networks.

It was long thought that it was more likely that those Mirim College grads were hard at work maintaining the government intranet, not plotting cyberwar against the south. Moreover, North Korea has been providing programming services to South Korean firms. Not a lot, but the work is competent, and cheap. So there is some software engineering capability north of the DMZ. But now there is the growing evidence of North Korean hackers at work.

The mystery angle shows up when you try to find any incidents of North Korean hackers actually doing anything. That could be construed as particularly ominous. Only the most elite hackers do their work without leaving behind any tracks, or evidence. Some have maintained that, because North Koreas Internet connections come from China, the North Korean cyberwarriors could be cleverly masquerading as Chinese hackers. However, after a decade, there should be some visible signs of North Korean hacking. It's highly unlikely that the North Korean hackers have been able to wander around the net without leaving some signs. While North Korea has produced some competent engineers, we know from decades of examining their work, that they don't produce super-scientists, or people capable of the kind of innovation that would enable North Korean cyberwarriors to remain undetected all these years. Thus some conclude that the growing number of North Korean connections are actually the result of Chinese hackers trying to make it look like the North Koreans are responsible for some of the growing number of attacks on Western targets.

So do the North Korean cyberwarriors exist, or are they a creation of South Korean intelligence agencies trying to obtain more money to upgrade government Information War defenses? North Korea probably has some personnel working on Internet issues, and Mirim College does train Internet engineers. North Korea probably has a unit devoted to Internet based warfare. But we know that North Korea has a lot of military units that are competent, in the same way robots are. The North Koreans picked this technique up from their Soviet teachers back in the 1950s. North Korea is something of a museum of Stalinist techniques.

But it's doubtful that their Internet experts are flexible and innovative enough to be a real threat. South Korea has to be wary because they have become more dependent on the web than another other on the planet, with exception of the United States. As in the past, if the north is to start any new kind of mischief, they will work it on South Korea first. So whatever the skill level of the North Korean hackers, they will attack South Korea first."

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htiw/ar...90623.aspx
06-24-2009 07:47 PM
Find all posts by this user Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 




User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)


Copyright © 2002-2024 Collegiate Sports Nation Bulletin Board System (CSNbbs), All Rights Reserved.
CSNbbs is an independent fan site and is in no way affiliated to the NCAA or any of the schools and conferences it represents.
This site monetizes links. FTC Disclosure.
We allow third-party companies to serve ads and/or collect certain anonymous information when you visit our web site. These companies may use non-personally identifiable information (e.g., click stream information, browser type, time and date, subject of advertisements clicked or scrolled over) during your visits to this and other Web sites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services likely to be of greater interest to you. These companies typically use a cookie or third party web beacon to collect this information. To learn more about this behavioral advertising practice or to opt-out of this type of advertising, you can visit http://www.networkadvertising.org.
Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2024 MyBB Group.