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North Korea’s very top elite, the inner core of the inner core, access the internet because they simply don’t live in the same universe as their countrymen.
In 2016, a leak allowed internet users to access North Korea’s intranet, revealing a highly-regulated service which praised Kim Jong-Un for visiting fruit farms.
For 25 million North Koreans, the internet is an impossibility. Only a few thousand privileged members of the hermit kingdom’s society can access the global internet, while even the country’s ...
Internet access in North Korea has experienced a major outage, according to a United Kingdom-based monitor, but the exact cause may be internal rather than the result of a cyberattack.
In short, the video — from 2013 — is authentic, and its producers said the venue featured in the footage was "designed to convince us that [North Korea] had access to the internet just like ...
North Korea will open a tourist site on its east coast next week that it calls a prelude to a new era in its tourism industry ...
How does a country with no open internet become the world’s most dangerous cybercriminal state? National security expert and former NSA officer John R. Schindler explains how Pyongyang’s ...
North Korea has one of the world's most strictly controlled internet systems, including access to any form of online communication.
Internet access is strictly limited in North Korea. It is not known how many people there have direct access to the global internet, but estimates generally place the figure at a small fraction ...
The folks who sit atop North Korea's sociopolitical hierarchy use the internet pretty much like anyone else.
Internet access in North Korea has experienced a major outage, according to a United Kingdom-based monitor, but the exact cause may be internal rather than the result of a cyberattack.
North Korea has one of the world's most strictly controlled internet systems, including access to any form of online communication.