The group has issued several warnings since the country's threats have intensified.
Uriminzokkiri, a news site, has been forced offline - while Twitter and Flickr accounts have been breached.
Anonymous also claimed to have accessed 15,000 usernames and passwords from a university database.
As part of action which the loosely organised collective has called "Operation Free Korea", the hackers have called for leader Kim Jong-un to step down, a democratic government to be put in place - and for North Koreans to get uncensored internet access.
Currently, only a select few in the country have access to the "internet" - which is more akin to a closed company intranet with only a select few websites that are government-run.
It only takes a few moments to share an article, but the person on the other end who reads it might have his life changed forever.
Thursday, April 04, 2013
BBC News - Anonymous 'hacks' North Korea social network accounts
BBC News - Anonymous 'hacks' North Korea social network accounts
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