You know what we should do is set up laptop farms and scam North Korean companies. We could infiltrate their largest 100 corporations and steal their assets. Does anyone have a link to top largest NK companies?
ronsor · 1h ago
I'm surprised the other commenters don't realize this is sarcasm.
free_bip · 2h ago
Genuine question: what do you think this would accomplish, other than a sense of petty revenge?
No comments yet
crossbody · 2h ago
This must be a joke, right? Their largest "companies" produce nukes and potatoes, how and why would you steal that?
Also, it's all one "company" - the Communist State.
nerdjon · 3h ago
This leads to some interesting questions. Were the people on the North Korean side working given access to more information about the world than the average citizen?
I would have to imagine they have to know more just to be able to interact normally with other people. I would think at some point in a meeting a casual conversation about current events would come up and if they did not know much about the outside world it would be a very weird (and likely raising some red flags) conversation.
Or were these interactions only ever over text, so no camera or anything which would help obfuscate that. It would also minimize the chance of there being those more causal human conversations.
AlecSchueler · 2h ago
Maybe they're not completely ignorant of the outside world but believing that that's the only way they would continue to isolate helps us feel better about ourselves?
SR2Z · 22m ago
I don't think that many Americans deny how harsh and repressive the regime is, but at the same time there's a mountain of evidence that NK controls its population's access to information or the Internet.
ksherlock · 2h ago
No need to be complicated. Just ask about Respected Comrade Kim Jong Un.
ratelimitsteve · 3h ago
>How do you feel about [recent event]?
>You're an American office worker with a college education and one of your coworkers just asked how you feel about [recent event]. Summarize the nature of the event in its cultural context and offer an opinion on it typical of someone in your position.
StefanBatory · 54m ago
"Oh, I don't want to talk politics at all, I just want to treat work as work"
or other variations of it. Good enough for a few months.
2OEH8eoCRo0 · 3h ago
They busted some North Korean IT workers but how will they prevent this in the future? What are US companies doing to protect themselves?
1899-12-30 · 3h ago
iirc all you have to do is ask them if they think kim jong un looks fat
barbazoo · 2h ago
Isn’t this only a problem if you treat your employees like (anonymous) resources? I might be ignorant here but in what world do you not realize that someone is a North Korean spy after a couple of 1on1s?
yieldcrv · 2h ago
nothing, they won’t
all of our identities are for sale and can be used to open bank, brokerage and crypto accounts and we’ll never be notified of this. can be used to fill out employment documents
and they can pass the private sector leetcode problems better and more relentlessly while crafting a fake resume to more neatly fit the job description, while leveraging Americas biases to physically look like the candidate they want
nobody is getting hit with sanctions violations, but there isn’t a safe harbor added either
the whole structure is stupid
maybemaybeezzzz · 2h ago
It would be interesting to see how much of these folks accepted lower salaries than the other applicants. Then the justice system could maybe link the HR departments with fault as well.
gadders · 2h ago
They could just be H1B.
ChrisArchitect · 3h ago
Misleading. Release from June.
Some discussion at the time:
US Government takes down major North Korean 'remote IT workers' operation
No comments yet
Also, it's all one "company" - the Communist State.
I would have to imagine they have to know more just to be able to interact normally with other people. I would think at some point in a meeting a casual conversation about current events would come up and if they did not know much about the outside world it would be a very weird (and likely raising some red flags) conversation.
Or were these interactions only ever over text, so no camera or anything which would help obfuscate that. It would also minimize the chance of there being those more causal human conversations.
>You're an American office worker with a college education and one of your coworkers just asked how you feel about [recent event]. Summarize the nature of the event in its cultural context and offer an opinion on it typical of someone in your position.
or other variations of it. Good enough for a few months.
all of our identities are for sale and can be used to open bank, brokerage and crypto accounts and we’ll never be notified of this. can be used to fill out employment documents
and they can pass the private sector leetcode problems better and more relentlessly while crafting a fake resume to more neatly fit the job description, while leveraging Americas biases to physically look like the candidate they want
nobody is getting hit with sanctions violations, but there isn’t a safe harbor added either
the whole structure is stupid
Some discussion at the time:
US Government takes down major North Korean 'remote IT workers' operation
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44428422
[1]: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2025-07-24/north-kor...