The Sony hack attack is blamed by the US government to North Korea. According to the FBI, the East Asian nation is "centrally involved" in the cyber attack, which was earlier claimed by a group called Guardians of Peace.
Over the past weeks, the entertainment firm was troubled by a series of hacking. The biggest victim of which is "The Interview" film starring Seth Rogen and James Franco. A North Korean official slammed the film for its portrayal of their leader, Kim Jong-un.
North Korea has denied any involvement in the Sony hack attack but it won't go down without any parting words. The Pyongyang government even has something to say to United States president Barack Obama that would definitely raise tensions between the two conflicting countries.
"Obama always goes reckless in words and deeds like a monkey in a tropical forest," an unidentified spokesman at the commission's Policy Department said in a statement according to Korean Central News Agency.
This statement allegedly stems from Obama's statement on Sony Hack Attack after the giant studio company decided to pull out "The Interview" amid threats from hackers.
"I wish they had spoken to me first," Obama said of Sony executives at a year-end news conference almost a week ago. "We cannot have a society in which some dictatorship someplace can start imposing censorship."
The North Korean spokesman's comments are allegedly in response to the recent internet shutdown in the country which they blame to the US. The shutdown took place right after Obama promised to respond "in a place and time and manner that we choose."
The North Korean commission's spokesman described the United States as "a big country, started disturbing the Internet operation of major media of the DPRK, not knowing shame like children playing tag."
So far, the United States and White House are yet to respond on North Korea's racial slur against Barack Obama.