[quote=mdk] The trackers have allegedly been traced to Kimland. There's actually a sizable portion of the tech-world that thinks that's a black flag. [/quote] I doubt it'd be traced directly to The One True Korea. The Greatest Korea probably has shell companies and deniable assets doing a lot of the cyberwarfare. Why invest in covert internet hacking capabilities if they can be traced directly back, right? So you cultivate covert assets elsewhere to do the dirty work. It might even be best to say that the groups that carried it out, if the Only Korea That Counts actually did it, are NK sponsored, but also expendable. But if they did do it over this, I think it was dumb even if it was temporarily disruptive -- they revealed their cyberwarfare capabilities for analysis over a triviality like a movie that makes fun of the Child King of Kimland. And that, incidentally, is why I think they had a hand in, because I doubt any credible hacker group cares about Kim Jong Un's reputation and face in the world, he's certainly reputed to be erratic enough to order that sort of rash action (or he isn't in control anymore and someone wants to make it look like he is) and that name, "Guardians of Peace" sounds like the sort of thing an out of touch North Korean propagandist might come up with thinking it doesn't sound blatantly stupid to English-speaking ears. Look at all the other hacktivist groups out there. They use a very different idiom for their names. Lulzsec, Anonymous and [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hacker_groups] so forth. Just a thought.