Please go on, anon. Almonds sense relevance.
'''By putting Mini-Duke in Russian,
мини-герзог (Rus.),
I'm forced to conclude that OP is saying that this espionage software was Russian.'''
///// I'm very uncomfortable with this conclusion, especially since we KNOW from the Vault 7 release that the CIA hacking tool suite included the ability for their software to impersonate/implicate just about any country /////
Mini-Duke was discovered February 27 2013. The first known sample: June 2011.
Risk: Document exfiltration.
Organizations that think (or know) they were compromised by Mini-Duke need to look at what data assets they had during the period when it was active, that could have been exfiltrated by a foreign power.
So when did North Korea suddenly get nuclear bomb capability?
When did it start performing nuclear tests in that mountain and threatening the world?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nuclear_weapons_tests_of_North_Korea
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9 October 2006, smallish, est. 0.7 - 2 kt and possibly a fizzle says Wikipedia.
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25 May 2009, est. 2 - 5.4 kt
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12 February 2013, 6 - 16 kt
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6 January 2016, 7 - 16.5 kt
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9 September 2016, 15 - 25 kt
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3 September 2017, 70 - 280 kt. NK claimed hydrogen bomb.
Let's suppose U.S. sensitive nuclear secrets were exfiltrated from classified databases sometime between 2011-2013.
Is it reasonable that, now having U.S. technology know-how, North Korea could within about 3 years convert that know-how into a workable nuclear weapon?
Three years? I think so. Especially if they had help.
Now I REALLY wonder what Eric Schmidt was doing in North Korea. Especially when this document was visible on the computer screen in images that Q gave us.
At minimum, the internet that Schmidt set up for them enabled NK scientists to study the latest western papers on nuclear physics.
It's not addressed to you, faggot.
If you don't get it, you're not the one it's addressed to.