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North Korean Threat Groups Using AI in Remote Technical Employee Schemes

By Linn Foster Freedman on March 12, 2026
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Microsoft Threat Intelligence issued a report on March 6, 2026, entitled, “AI as tradecraft: How threat actors operationalize AI,” which outlines how threat actors, including those from North Korea, are “operationalizing AI along the cyberattack lifecycle…to bypass safeguards and perform malicious activity.” The threat actors are adopting AI “as operational enablers, embedding AI into their workflows to increase the speed, scale, and resilience of cyber operations.”

The report details how North Korean remote IT worker schemes dubbed Jasper Sleet and Coral Sleet provides the threat actors with “sustained, large-scale misuse of legitimate access through identity fabrication, social engineering, and long-term operational persistence at low cost.” The threat actors are also toying with the  agentic AI use, which could “complicate detection and response.”

The report outlines how the threat actors have incorporated automation into their schemes across the attack lifecycle to ensure North Korean threat actors are “hired, stay hired, and misuse access at scale” at global companies.

The report is a must read for any company that has been hit before by the North Korean tech worker scheme, or those who have not yet been hit, but recruit remote workers for technology positions.

Photo of Linn Foster Freedman Linn Foster Freedman

Linn Freedman practices in data privacy and security law, cybersecurity, and complex litigation. She is a member of the Business Litigation Group and the Financial Services Cyber-Compliance Team, and chair’s the firm’s Data Privacy and Security Team. Linn focuses her practice on…

Linn Freedman practices in data privacy and security law, cybersecurity, and complex litigation. She is a member of the Business Litigation Group and the Financial Services Cyber-Compliance Team, and chair’s the firm’s Data Privacy and Security Team. Linn focuses her practice on compliance with all state and federal privacy and security laws and regulations. She counsels a range of public and private clients from industries such as construction, education, health care, insurance, manufacturing, real estate, utilities and critical infrastructure, marine and charitable organizations, on state and federal data privacy and security investigations, as well as emergency data breach response and mitigation. Linn is an Adjunct Professor of the Practice of Cybersecurity at Brown University and an Adjunct Professor of Law at Roger Williams University School of Law.  Prior to joining the firm, Linn served as assistant attorney general and deputy chief of the Civil Division of the Attorney General’s Office for the State of Rhode Island. She earned her J.D. from Loyola University School of Law and her B.A., with honors, in American Studies from Newcomb College of Tulane University. She is admitted to practice law in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Read her full rc.com bio here.

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  • Posted in:
    Intellectual Property
  • Blog:
    Data Privacy + Cybersecurity Insider
  • Organization:
    Robinson & Cole LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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