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As a private U.S. citizen, is it legal for me to hack North Korean systems?
2 points by aniftythrifrty 880 days ago
Legal as far as the United States goes. Same with Russia, Iran, etc. Since they are all enemies of my country, can I legally assist in messing with their systems? Which laws would I be breaking? How would it ever get reported?
4 comments

Do you fall under the rules defining "militia" in your state? If so you may be, to an outside observer, no different from a soldier of the US Army acting without orders in the commission of what would almost certainly be called war crimes.

could you legally travel to the border of one of these states and begin firing weapons at them?

If the hostile motivation is the same, why should there be any difference in the reaction to it? You wanna impede their country, its government, its citizens from the normal pursuit of their life: whether you do so by kinetic weapon or by assaulting their digital civil infrastructure.

If you choose to pursue private wars, do so on your own; and please loudly disclaim the involvement of the rest of your neighbors when you do.

All I'm asking is the legality of it as far as the U.S. is concerned. Would U.S. law enforcement care? What law would I be breaking?
Your U.S. ISP's terms of service, likely
You might run afoul of your ISP's terms of service, regardless of which country you wish to flex your hacking skills on.
Legality is less relevant than the likelihood of being extradited.
To NK? I don’t believe the US has an extradition treaty with them. And even if they did, politics would stop any extraditions from moving forward.

Do enough damage though, and the American government will find a reason to stop you if you are destabilizing the US’s diplomatic relations with other countries.

By whom? I doubt we extradite to any of the countries that we sanction.
No
Betteridge Law was never so obvious.