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Watch this video of how a job interviewer exposes a North Korean fake IT worker

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Why This Matters

This article highlights a novel method used to expose North Korean impostors in remote IT job interviews by asking them to insult Kim Jong Un, a task difficult for regime-controlled individuals due to strict laws. This tactic underscores the ongoing challenges in verifying the authenticity of remote workers and protecting companies from sanctioned entities. It also illustrates how geopolitical tensions influence hiring practices and cybersecurity measures in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

For the last few years, North Koreans have gotten remote jobs at hundreds Western companies pretending to be from somewhere else, using fake resumes, and sometimes with the help of American collaborators.

It’s been a major problem for years, as North Korea remains highly sanctioned by the U.S. and European governments because of the regime’s banned nuclear weapons program, meaning companies are not allowed to hire North Koreans.

Over time, someone realized that there could be a way to expose possible North Koreans during the interview process: Ask the suspected impostor to insult the country’s dictator Kim Jong Un, given that insulting him is illegal in the country and can result in harsh punishments. While this is a well-known strategy, we rarely see real life examples of it working in real time.

That’s exactly what happened in this video, which went viral on X. The clip shows a job interview during a video call, where the person hiring asks the job applicant to say “Kim Jong Un is a fat ugly pig.”

Here is a video of a North Korean IT worker being stopped dead in their tracks upon being required to insult Kim Jong Un.

It won't work forever, but right now it's genuinely an effective filter. I'm yet to come across one who can say it. https://t.co/8FFVPxNm8X pic.twitter.com/KXI5efMo5L — tanuki42 (@tanuki42_) April 6, 2026

The request appears to stump the job applicant, who gets visibly uncomfortable, pretends to have not understood the question, and then simply exits the interview.

It’s important to note that this trick doesn’t always work. Some North Korean fake IT workers, particularly those who live in China or Russia, are not always under as strict supervision as the hackers within North Korea’s borders, and as such these tactics are not always effective strategies on their own.