Did North Korea Hack Sony Pictures' Corporate Computer Network?

A massive computer hack took down the entire computer network of Sony Pictures Entertainment, one of the world's biggest movie companies, last week, forcing employees to ditch their computers for pen, paper, and phones.
Several upcoming films produced by the studio have already been released online in high quality, along with reams of corporate data, including salary information, social security numbers for thousands of employees, and anonymized complaints about the company's movies from its own employees, who, it seems, really don't like Adam Sandler films.
Who's behind this massive digital intrusion? Initial reports suggest that the culprit could be North Korea, and that the hack could be retaliation for Sony's upcoming movie The Interview, which stars Seth Rogen and James Franco as journalists secretly tasked with assassinating North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un. North Korea, which has complained loudly about the movie, has issued a denial that it is responsible for the attack. But it remains a "principal suspect," though not the only one, according to Reuters, which reports that the tools used in the hack closely resembled tools previously used by North Korea to attack South Korea.
This is one of the largest—maybe the single largest—corporate hacks in history, at least that we know about, and if it's true that North Korea is involved, then it represents a disturbing new precedent in international cyber-squabbling. (Judge for yourself if that represents an acceptable use of the prefix "cyber.") At the same time, though, I think it would also suggest the pathetic smallness of North Korea—expending resources to attack a movie studio because it felt insulted by the plot of a James Franco comedy. That's not exactly the sign of a confident, big-league player on the international scene. I don't mean to diminish the effect this attack has had on Sony; for the studio, it's borderline catastrophic. But if North Korea really is behind this, then it also highlights how petty and fragile the nation's sense of itself really is.
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If they did, this is the first time in my lifetime an evil dictator has done something fun. I know he is evil and his regime is worse than the one in 1984. But damn, way to go Sung.
The only thing missing is more hacked naked slefies of various Hollywood starlets.
Come on, you don't think having Colbert host the correspondent's dinner was fun?
Although I'm with you on the hacked selfies.
And frankly, it being a Franco "comedy" is enough of a reason to hack it. Insulted dictatorship or not.
That's kind of what I was thinking... it could've just been a disgruntled fan of actual comedy sending out a digital lament.
Ghaddafi had all of those attractive chorus girls with machine guns following him around; that was sort of fun.
+1 Bunga Bunga party.
I'm gonna need a noun and a verb at the end of that last sentence.
This is WEB-O-THON!
You pay for your nouns and verbs.
Up with this nonsense, I will not put!
Kim's just mad that he isn't being played by Arec Barwin in the movie.
Uhm 'prayed by arec barwin'
Curse you James Fwanko!
Does anyone?
The films where Adam Sandler doesn't play his typical role, yes. Those are also the films that Sandler fans don't like.
It's strange, after this broke I looked for the Franco/Rogan movie torrent and it wasn't loaded yet. Granted, this was several days ago...
Hmmm. I can't tell which entity I detest more...North Korea or Sony...can't they both lose/destroy each other?
It's not as though corporate hackers stealing e-mails from climate sciientists could give the Dear Leader ideas