#07: Your Next Hire Might Be a North Korean Spy
North Korea is infiltrating Fortune 500 companies with fake employees. They create authentic LinkedIn profiles, excel in remote interviews, collect salaries, and secretly steal intellectual property, cryptocurrency, and system access. This isn't a future threat. It's happening right now across more than 40 countries. In this episode of Follow the White Rabbit, Link11 ISO Kofi Osae-Attah sits down with Kritika Roy, a senior threat intelligence researcher at DCSO in Berlin. Together, they map the threat landscape that most security teams only partially see.
Kritika's work sits at the intersection of geopolitics and cybersecurity — and that intersection is where the full picture emerges. China is running long-term intelligence operations aligned with its five-year economic plan. Russia is focused on disruption and sabotage, especially since invading Ukraine. Iran is tracking dissidents and targeting organizations with Israeli ties. And North Korea? It's doing it all — stealing money to fund weapons programs, embedding operatives inside companies, and learning by doing. The line between nation-state espionage and cybercrime has blurred to the point of being nearly indistinguishable. Threat actors are buying ransomware on the dark web as if it were Amazon. Attribution is becoming more difficult. Defenders are falling behind.
The most important insight from this conversation isn't technical; it's contextual. Geopolitics determines who targets you, when, and why. A NATO summit, a trade dispute, or an election can trigger a wave of tailored phishing campaigns and targeted intrusions. Kritika's advice to security teams isn't to become intelligence agencies. Rather, it's to read the news, understand the motivations behind attacks, and stop treating every threat with the same level of urgency. Prioritize based on context. If you're hiring remotely, ask your candidates what the local food is like. You'll be surprised at how much that one question can reveal.
TAKEAWAYS:
1. North Korean IT workers are already inside companies. They are hired through legitimate job platforms, work as regular employees, and use their access to steal money, intellectual property, and system knowledge. The fix? At a minimum, conduct one in-person interview.
2. Geopolitics is a threat intelligence tool. Phishing lures are timed to coincide with summits, elections, and conflicts. Knowing what's happening in the world allows you to anticipate what's coming at your organization.
3. The four main threat actors have different goals. China wants intelligence. Russia wants to cause disruption. North Korea wants money and knowledge. Iran targets dissidents and organizations related to Israel. Knowing who you're up against changes everything about how you defend yourself.
4. The line between cybercrime and nation-state activity is disappearing. Nation-state actors are purchasing off-the-shelf malware on the dark web. Attribution is becoming more difficult. Security teams need to adapt their thinking.
5. Fundamentals still win. Patch management, identity security, endpoint visibility, and regular red team exercises are not boring basics; they're essential. They're the difference between being resilient and being exposed.
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LINKS:
Take a look at Kritika Roy's Linkedin profile [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kritika-roy-dcso/] or the DCSO Website [https://www.dcso.de]
MITRE ATT&CK – North Korea Threat Groups [https://attack.mitre.org/groups/]
FBI Advisory: North Korean IT Worker Threat (2024) [https://www.ic3.gov]
Mandiant / Google: APT Overview by Nation State [https://cloud.google.com/security/resources/insights/apt-groups]