A federal court in St Louis has indicted 14 North Koreans for allegedly being part of a long-running conspiracy aimed at extorting funds from US companies and funneling money to Pyongyang’s weapons programmes.

The wider scheme allegedly involves thousands of North Korean IT workers who use false, stolen, and borrowed identities from people in the US and other countries to get hired and work remotely for US firms.

The indictement says the defendants and others working with them generated at least $88m (£51.5m) for the North Korean regime over a six-year period.

[…]

The prosecutors say the suspects worked for two North Korean-controlled companies - China-based Yanbian Silverstar and Russia-based Volasys Silverstar.

[…]

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6 points

… and yet, North Koreans did this work, and I addressed the money issue from the regime-level down.

Stealing Identities to get work does not imply the ruined the credit of those people. Getting worked up over this is NOT all that far off from getting worked up over immigrant laborers stealing identities so they can work and feed their families, or recieve food stamps or medical care. At least those last two kinda-sorta have victims, and yet I still prefer immigrants be able to eat.

Sorry, you’re not going to be able to get me to buy into the fear-mongering hysteria-machine by apeing thier narratives. I’m not saying your arguments are invalid, just addressing them from the same surface-level reading you gave mine.

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1 point

From the article

They would then instruct those US residents to install remote access software allowing them to appear to be working from the US when they were actually overseas.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but North Korean civilians have no access to internet.

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1 point

Rather spies, soldiers, whatever, work remotely for western companies than whatever other bull their government wants them doing.

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1 point

There’s a height of feigned ignorance. There’s no chance the money goes anywhere than directly to the military government. Not to “families”.

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4 points

These people didn’t work to ‘feed their families’. Their families likely didn’t benefit at all from this scheme.

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2 points

The presence of remote working itself exposes the flaws with the arguer’s chain of comments. It is (and it is funny that I can actually make this conclusion) impossible that the money does not go directly to the North Korea regime. North Korean civilians have no internet.

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2 points

How do you know?

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4 points
*

Aside from using stolen identities to avoid detection, prosecutors said they paid people residing in the US to receive, set up, and host laptops provided by the US employers. They would then instruct those US residents to install remote access software allowing them to appear to be working from the US when they were actually overseas.

It is directly in the article. It is impossible for civilians to do this. In an absolute sense.

Lastly, the aggressive countering nature of this comment was unnecessary if you were merely seeking clarification.

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1 point
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Repeating the same tired gibberish with no elabbration, much?

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3 points

These aren’t ‘common’ IT workers seeking a job but spies working for North Korea as the article says. What should I elaborate here?

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