Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Inside job: Lizard Squad and ex-Sony employees likely aided North Korea’s hack attack

Add as a preferred source on Google

Unless you’ve been living under a (terribly remote) rock for the past month or so, you know the story by now. Seth Rogen and James Franco’s latest comedic production, about a far-fetched Kim Jong-Un assassination plot, infuriated the North Korean dictator, who ordered a cyber-hit on Sony Pictures.

The entertainment giant suffered great losses on the heels of its servers’ breakdown, as heaps of sensitive, confidential and outright embarrassing information made its illicit way online. The full impact of the hack attack on Sony’s reputation and financial status remains hard to measure, but at least the authorities are onto the perpetrators.

Recommended Videos

And the co-conspirator hints are beginning to pile up. Reports now claim the self-titled “Guardians of Peace” may have been aided and abetted by a separate notorious cybercrime ring, Lizard Squad, and disgruntled former Sony employees.

Ruining Christmas for gamers worldwide wasn’t the recently unmasked members of Lizard Squad kept busy. While they didn’t play a “large part” in Sony’s hack, they “handed over some Sony employee logins” to the brains behind the intrusion.

That’s according to an alleged administrator of the group, who was surprisingly candid and forward in a Washington Post interview. Almost too forward. Before you even think it, yes, the prestigious publication verified this “Ryan Cleary’s” affiliation with the Lizard Squad and. That doesn’t guarantee his claims are correct, however.

Cleary touched on a number of topics including the Christmas DDoS raids on Sony and Microsoft and Lizard Squad’s beef with the Tor network, which the hackers hoped to prove isn’t as safe and anonymous as people think.

He poked fun at Microsoft, which apparently put up no resistance to recent attacks, despite numerous preceding warnings. And last but not least, he confirmed his crew of cyber-criminals supplied the Guardians of Peace with “a couple” of Sony employee login credentials “for the initial hack.”

Researchers from the security firm Norse Corporation, meanwhile, have found “indicators” suggesting unhappy former Sony workers may have collaborated with mysterious pro-piracy hacktivists, which diverted the attention from them by throwing the blame on North Korea.

It appears, then, that there’s plenty of blame (and credit) to go around. Keep in mind, however, that so far the FBI has no wavered from its

Adrian Diaconescu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adrian is a mobile aficionado since the days of the Nokia 3310, and a PC enthusiast since Windows 98. Later, he discovered…
Topics
Google will let some Chromebooks transition into a Googlebook experience soon
Google says some existing models will move into the Googlebook experience, while ChromeOS support continues for devices left behind
Clothing, Coat, Footwear

Googlebook is launching this year, but Google isn’t cutting every Chromebook loose.

In an interview with Chrome Unboxed, Google VP John Maletis said some Chromebooks will be able to move into Googlebook-style software through a firmware update. This means Googlebook shifts Google’s laptop plans toward an Android foundation, with Gemini built more deeply into the laptop experience and Android apps no longer sitting behind the same emulation layer.

Read more
Googlebook laptops will come in multiple chip options beyond just Intel, and that’s a relief
More chips, more choices. Google is giving Googlebook buyers real hardware flexibility from day one.
Googlebook

After Google's bombastic Android Show, where the company unveiled tons of new features, Google VP John Maletis sat down with Chrome Unboxed to talk Googlebook. The interview contains several nuggets of information, and one of the most reassuring confirmations we got was about the chips powering these new laptops. 

Maletis said that Google is working with Intel, Qualcomm, and MediaTek, meaning the platform won't live or die by a single silicon provider. For anyone who has followed the Chromebook space for a while, this is genuinely good news.

Read more
Can’t wait for the Steam Machine? This AMD cube is here for a modest $4,000
Thunderobot’s AMD cube looks like a Steam Machine with a workstation price
Thunderbolt launches Steam Machine-style Cube-shaped AMD AI Workstation Mini PC

Valve's highly anticipated Steam Machine is still a while away from an official release. But a new AMD-powered cube from Thunderbolt is already leaning hard into the same living-room PC energy. However, the price is anything but console-like. Thunderbolt has just unveiled its AI Mini Workstation in China after first showing it at CES 2026. The compact cube-shaped PC is powered by one of the most powerful AMD mobile chips, if you have a few thousand dollars to spare.

Steam Machine looks for workstation money

Read more