Sony looking for possible North Korea link in hacking incident

Company is set to release film about assassination attempt on Kim Jong-Un

Sony is set to release ‘The Interview’ starring James Franco (left) Seth Rogen on Christmas Day – the film is centred around an assassination attempt on North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. Photograph: Getty

Sony Pictures Entertainment is investigating to determine if hackers working on behalf of North Korea might be responsible for a cyber attack that knocked out the studio's computer network earlier this week, the technology news site Re/code has reported.

The attack occurred a month before Sony Pictures, a unit of Sony Corp, is to release The Interview. The movie is a comedy about two journalists who are recruited by the CIA to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.

The Pyongyang government denounced the film as “undisguised sponsoring of terrorism, as well as an act of war” in a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in June.

Representatives of the North Korean mission to the United Nations could not immediately be reached for comment on Saturday.

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Sony Pictures' computer system went down on Monday. Before screens went dark, they displayed a red skull and the phrase "Hacked By #GOP," which reportedly stands for Guardians of Peace, the Los Angeles Times said.

The hackers also warned they would release "secrets" stolen from the Sony servers, the Times reported.

Re/code said in a report late Friday that Sony and security consultants were investigating the possibility that someone acting on behalf of North Korea, possibly from China, was responsible. Re/code said a link to North Korea had not been confirmed but it had not been ruled out.

A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that Sony Pictures was investigating every possibility, adding no link to North Korea has been uncovered.

Sony acknowledged the computer outage in a statement on Tuesday. Emails to Sony were bouncing back on Saturday with a message asking senders to contact employees by telephone because its email system was “experiencing a disruption.”

The Interview, scheduled for release in the United States on Christmas Day, stars James Franco as the host of a tabloid television show that is enjoyed by Kim, with Seth Rogen as the show's producer. When they are granted a rare interview with Kim, the CIA wants to turn them into assassins.

KCNA, the official news agency in isolationist North Korea, quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman in June as promising a "merciless counter-measure" if the film is released. It has also been reported that the government wrote to US President Barack Obama asking him to stop the film's release.