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Illegal File-Sharing Chips Away At North Korean Propaganda

In the high-stakes debate over control of the Internet, it is common to hear how the free flow of information is crucial to development of humanity. For North Korea, a country that has almost zero Internet access and is repressed beyond anything experienced in the West, the free flow of information is a distant concept. But according to a new report, the sharing of pirate TV shows and music among the citizens of the country is challenging the DPRK regimes’ depiction of the outside world.

When it comes to censorship, few countries in the world are as restrictive or repressive as North Korea.

Citizens of the DPRK are routinely deprived access to any and all information, unless of course it has been created, or authorized, by the regime.

The end result is a largely brainwashed society which is fed an alternative version of reality in order for it to be manipulated and controlled. But according to a new survey, developments in technology are giving citizens of the DPRK new access to information and insights into life beyond their borders.

The report, titled A Quiet Opening surveyed North Korean refugees and those who managed to travel outside the country. What it shows is that increasing numbers are gaining access to pirated media from outside the hermit nation, with potentially life-changing consequences.

While devices such as standard radios and televisions are manufactured so that citizens (at least those who can afford them) can only listen to state-run radio stations, imported devices are able to pick up signals from South Korea, China and beyond, although receiving these broadcasts is a crime.

With Internet unavailable to all but a tiny percentage of the elite, citizens of North Korea are obtaining their information through other means, notably file-sharing devices such as DVDs, MP3 and MP4 players, and USB drives.

Through these means they are being increasingly exposed to pirated TV shows and pop music leaking from neighboring South Korea. What they gain from these files is an alternative take on the world which challenges the propaganda of their leaders.

“I was told when I was young that South Koreans are very poor, but the South Korean dramas proved that just isn’t the case,” explains a 31-year-old who managed to escape North Korea in 2010.

Although there is no Internet, computers are legal in the country and are essential for shifting data to and from USB sticks and other media playback devices. What the report shows is that since computers are still rare, people buy blank devices and use their social networks to acquire pirate South Korean media from people with PC access.

“The MP4 [player] was empty but I received movies and music from friends who had computers and then I watched and listened to them. The battery was charged with electricity and it was portable so young people liked it,” says a 23-year-old former Pyongyang resident.

And it appears that the unlawful sharing of files is widespread, particularly among the youth.

“About 70-80 percent of people that have MP3/4 players are young people,” a 44-year-old male who left DPRK in 2010 reports. “When you do a crackdown of MP3/4 players among high school and university students, you see that 100 percent of them have South Korean music.”

In North Korea possession of unauthorized TV shows or music is a very dangerous affair. Depending on how the offense is viewed, punishments can range from 3 months unpaid labor to 5 years in a prison camp if the media originates from South Korea.

But despite the massive risks, young people in the DPRK are apparently prepared to defy the regime by consuming unauthorized media anyway, something they have in common with the US youth who share files in the face of $150,000 statutory damages.

As we read yesterday, the introduction of tougher and tougher laws to combat the spread of pirate material in Sweden also failed to reach the desired effect when they conflicted with social norms.

Of course, the situation in North Korea goes way beyond anything experienced in the US or Europe, but the battles being fought center around the same thing – the free flow of information. Access to information will eventually set the North Koreans free and if that can be achieved through file-sharing, it will be the activity’s biggest achievement to date, bar none.

The report can be downloaded here (pdf)

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  • Anyone

    so even in a perfect MAFIAA world (North Korea) there still is piracy

    go figure

    • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

       N.Korea is indeed “a perfect MAFIAA world” in which censorship of info and FULL control of the means to communicate are strictly controlled, regulated and approved only by those in power or authority.

      And that’s why the so-called ‘content industry’ are losing this on-going battle with their own end-users.  People do NOT want to be told what to hear or view, let alone when to do it.  We also do NOT want to be incessantly plagued with stupid fucking ad-breaks every 5 goddamned minutes ffs.

      The people of N.Korea are actually the ideal subjects in this censorship experiment, and the MAFIAA are the ideal DPRK fools who are about to be overthrown in our reach for freedom to share information as we please, when we please.

      Peoples of the World 1
      N.Korea & MAFIAA 0

      • Arthur

        This shows the path that MAFIAA-owned US is taking.
        That reminds me some comments I saw from some anti-piracy people, saying stuff like: “[Insert some kind of entertainment here] is not a right, it is a privilege, and if you have no money to buy it, go find another hobby.”
        Those MAFIAA drones keep saying bullshit like this whenever someone questioned something like: “why are the prices so high?”, “it is buying used games a bad thing?”.
        This is the kind of bullshit that may lead to a future like N. Korea… When people start to think that the only thing they can do is to be a***** by their corporate overlords, and that any kind of rebellious attitude is criminal and downright wrong.

        • Lethn

          Any chance that we could stop the dumbing down of important and complex issues into stupid soundbites or puns which make me lose faith in the whole idea of organised protest.

          Granted, you lot aren’t as bad as occupy wall street who claim they represent the 99% why can’t you just talk in normal, basic and coherent English? You’re becoming the very people you claim to hate so much.

        • Guest

          @cbd3dfe24eafa62b909bf74b0710b9d3:disqus 

          GTFO.

          Whether somebody is a master of English or not doesn’t affect the validity of their opinion. 

          By the way, you can’t punctuate worth shit. Just FYI. If you want to ask other people for normal, basic, coherent English, maybe you should demonstrate some yourself. Thanks for the delicious irony, though.

        • http://lazycash1.com/ Anonymous

          my buddy’s sister-in-law made $18108 a month ago. she worrks on the internet and bought a $525400 condo. All she did was get blessed and put into action the instructions given on this website ===>> ?????? http://job2seek.blogspot.com

        • Anonymous

          my roomate’s ex-wife brought home $19224 the previous month. she is making income on the internet and moved in a $491500 condo. All she did was get lucky and try the instructions laid out on this web page===>> ?????? http://job2seek.blogspot.com

        • Lethn

          I don’t give a fuck about punctuation or writing complicated words, I’m talking about not using the same stupid puns and soundbites politicians use to simplify important problems with our species.

        • Lethn

          I don’t give a fuck about punctuation or writing complicated words, I’m talking about not using the same stupid puns and soundbites politicians use to simplify important problems with our species.

        • Lethn

          I don’t give a fuck about punctuation or writing complicated words, I’m talking about not using the same stupid puns and soundbites politicians use to simplify important problems with our species.

        • Lethn

          I don’t give a fuck about punctuation or writing complicated words, I’m talking about not using the same stupid puns and soundbites politicians use to simplify important problems with our species.

        • Anonymous

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  • Anonymous

    Ok see that jsut does not make any sense at all dude. I dont get it.
    Anon-Guys.tk

  • just_me

    fucking life, i think censorship there is expending to a point when the GOV will watch people inside bathrooms.THEY ARE ARE DEAD

  • Lugzz

    Reason to use TOR people.
    Help these oppressed people out.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwMr8Xl7JMQ

    • just_me

      how? can suggest a good idea to help them ?

      • Lugzz

        1) watch the video for info on Tor’s fight…..it’s a good watch:

        How governments have tried to block Tor http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwMr8Xl7JMQ runtime: 1h 24min

        2) use tor browser: https://www.torproject.org/projects/torbrowser.html.en

        It can be simple as just using tor as a relay , it is explained in the video.

        • http://twitter.com/Anime4PSP Anime 4 PSP

          umm, dunno, maybe you don’t understand, but when there is no internet, tor kinda  won’t help

        • Lugzz

          that’s it, I am unable to comprehend.
          Ignore trying to help , because anyone who records evil on a cell phone in N.Korea won’t be able to find a connection anywhere , or share the files with people who have access.
          They defiantly won’t be able to smuggle files into China , where internet is available but heavily censored.

          Sorry for being so stupid.
          There is no internet at all in N.Korea or China where N.Korea internet passes through.

          Obviously , we should just let people die at the hands of spying regimes because they leaked news of the oppression of their people.
          No one with internet access in N.Korea would ever leak info on the crimes of their government , especially not to people in China.

          People don’t risk their lives every day,  trying to smuggle the story out.

          Is that what I don’t comprehend ?

          http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newsvideo/8113817/Inside-North-Korea-exclusive-footage.html

    • This Cats Got It

      They have no internet, not a censored internet.

      But if they have computers then NK would be a prime place to start the pirate network.

      • Lugzz

        But they do, it goes through China.
        The people also smuggle into China , where censorship exists.

        • Anonymous

          Although through a lesser extent.

  • Master

    Even under oppression, piracy still prevails!

  • Kev

    if they have little or no internet connection(none more likely)how can this ever happen.if they want to be ultimately free from oppression the korean people themselves will have to break free no one can do it for them

  • Zan

    Quick RIAA and co, north koreans are pirating your tunes despite a harsh sentance if caught.

    Yiu better contact North Korea and demand the death penalty for filesharers, that’ll stop them.

    I am of course joking but i bet a few riaa dudes thought the above when hearing this news.

  • YARIGHT

    um i have one thing to say i hope you dont host inside north korea now…..

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  • townie2

    i don’t mean to be counter-productive here, but this is not quite as good as it sounds. the AA’s don’t think North Korea is ideal with their tight censorship because THEY are censored, Western movies and music are banned, therefore the AA’s saw a potentially big market for movie theaters, DVD sales/rentals, etc. out of their reach as a money maker.

    • Anyone

      the MAFIAA and North Korea only differ in what they want to censor
      otherwise they are identical in their goals (total control of flow of information)

  • Anon

    I feel really sad for the North Koreans but at the same time i see many comparisons to how Americans are living today. A typical example was when Bush jnr was vote in the second time. It was plain old propaganda that encourage people to vote for him, nothing more. The same as in North Korea propaganda gets people to think the way the gov wants them to think.
    The whole world thought it was a bad idea for bush to get vote in, even i had enough access to information to know he would mess up big time, but the American people were fed lies and the negatives were not allowed to be shown on American TV in a clear and concise way. If anything the Americans have become even better at spreaing Propoganda than the Koreans as they can in fact get a large part of the community to vote against there best interests when they have full access to places like the internet to learn the truth about almost any subject. look at how, even now they are managing to get people angry about single payer healthcare which in the rest of the world is providing some of the best medical care at very low cost compared to America.Look at how the American population thinks they have the best healthcare in the world but there infant mortality rate is amongst the highest in the world. Look at how there celebrities routinely have there children in foreign countries as thy do not trust the American hospitals. American healthcare is most definitely not the best in the world far from it they are one of the worst bar some third world countries. Yes they have some really good hospitals, but having a few good hospitals does not make your healthcare system good if the rest are mediocre.

    And the American Government can spread this propaganda when people have other means of getting there news, unlike North Koreans, but even then we see so many Americans on-line condoning anyone who says anything against there country, that is how good the propaganda machine is in America.

    • Guest

      “Look at how the American population thinks they have the best healthcare in the world”

      They don’t. You are quite simply and utterly wrong here, and I’m going
      to give you a link that will prove it. It’s a popular pundit
      point, but you are not examining what Americans actually think. In
      reality, the majority of Americans consider their health care system to
      be either average or below average, with wealth and political
      orientation (conservatism) correlating with you being more likely to
      think the health care system is better.

      http://pewresearch.org/databank/dailynumber/?NumberID=825

      “the negatives were not allowed to be shown on American TV in a clear and concise way.”

      That’s not exactly true. They weren’t shown on Fox, and CNN was too incompetent to show anything worthwhile, but MSNBC and local channels did show Bush as a blazing incompetent. The problem isn’t that Americans had less information than you. They had the information, but they also had additional perspectives from people who liked Bush, or more importantly, who hated Kerry (which was not unreasonable. Think of a more liberal Romney and you have Kerry defined). You did not have those perspectives to anywhere near the same degree.

      “we see so many Americans on-line condoning anyone who says anything
      against there country”

      This isn’t a condition caused by being American, or caused by any “propaganda machine” it’s a problem shared by any nationalistic country. Examples of other countries with this problem include South Korea and Germany. Strong patriotic identity correlates with an unwillingness to hear bad things about your country. You need to correctly identify the problem before you can understand the symptom.

      Do a little research on Americans. I think you’re just falling victim to the propaganda machine. They know more then you and the media give them credit for.

    • This Cats Got It

       Implying the US election isnt a complete fraud, which it is.

      Everyone can vote for the same guy, but only the one chosen by the elite will win.

      • Anonymous

        Not quite. This is the way the US electoral system works.

        Both sides hype their guy. One gets elected. Whatever sock puppet you voted for will be owned in whole by those who invested in his campaign.

        Hence the main difference between Obama and GWB in this particular sense is the motivation they use to chip away at civil rights.

        One may do so because a corporation wants him to. The other because right-wing fundies want porn gone from the net. The end result will be the same.

  • Guest

    I’m not sure if it would be hilarious or sad if any IP enforcement investigations in South Korea end up turning up North Korean IP addresses.

  • john doe

    This goes to show that the need to share data is present everywhere in the world, it’s like an universal instinct.

    It’s great to know that it’s happening even in NK.

    • EndIP

      The human brain is physically wired to copy information, it is how we learn.We are not born knowing how to speak a language we copy our parents and others around us until we can learn it. In the end it is impossible to stop piracy without destroying what makes us human.

      Computers are just extension of ourselves, they allow us to communicate we each other. Communication is the sharing of information. Technology has made it easier to share information and ideas with more people while decentralizing control.

      Intellectual Property rights as they are today is responsible for 3 billion people living on a couple dollars a day by denying access to technology, information and even food (international patents on food). The censorship doesn’t deny just movies, music and games, it enslaves and oppresses people.

      I agree there is a need to share information because it will set the world free.

      • Anonymous

        Concur. People who did not share information with one another died out without passing on their genes. The tribe as a whole is harmed by overt secrecy.

        This has been known for about four thousand years so it should have come as no surprise that “copyright” has no chance of either acceptance or practical value in the real world.

        • Guest

          “People who did not share information with one another died out without passing on their genes.”

          That’s not really true. Societies that did not share information died out, but individuals who did not share information were successful, so long as they lived in such a society. The explanation for why is quite simple; information is powerful, and having more information made those people more powerful. There is a reason we see the secretive trait in many of society’s most successful individuals.

          That doesn’t make it morally right to be secretive, but from a genetic standpoint, it’s not harmful (and it can be helpful) for someone to be secretive.

      • Guest

        “The human brain is physically wired to copy information, it is how we learn.”
        That depends on how you define “copy”. Memory is often thought to be a copying process, but in reality, it works as more of a constructive process. This means that you only store or “copy” a few details, and you simply remake memories from that, filling in the blanks with what you expect. That’s not really like copying, which preserves data.

        That’s my nitpick for the day. Troll away!

  • Bobslater

    Replace DPRK with USA in the first two paragraphs and it still makes perfect sense.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/XSMUVFIRPIYSVYWTX6Q4JNTPCM Gary

    what Chris replied I didnt know that people can profit $8992 in one month on the internet. have you read this site link  (Click on menu Home more information)    http://goo.gl/YJllz 

  • Guest

    “The end result is a largely brainwashed society which is fed an alternative version of reality in order for it to be manipulated and controlled. ”

    Huh… Why does that seem homehow hauntingly familiar?

    • Guest

      *somehow

    • Anyone

      it’s called Fox News

  • Llama Smith

    Say „pirated” ONE MORE TIME, and I’ll fuck you up, you ACTA-supporting Lamar-Smith-dick-sucking, organized-crime-supporting piece of shit!

    • Anyone

      pirated

  • Pingback: On the emancipatory potential of filesharing: The case of North Korea « The Science of Destruction

  • Anonymous

    Man I never eally thought about it liek that dude.
    Anon-Guys.tk

  • http://twitter.com/confidel59 Jose Miguel Garcia

    Hey, where did you guys get this info? Straight from the CIA, or from Hillary’s State Department? The strong capitalist-freedom-imperialist-democracy-pro-consumption ideological bent is so obvious. I mean, really, what IS the source of this pro-Wall St. propaganda?

  • Ron gee

    The Internet as done nothing for humanity it as made more easy roles for crime as in identity fraud , money laundering , split up more marriages and couples through social media made sexs a have when you want with who u want it causing a new problem with sexs addicts due to porn being available to everyone including minors it caused the closing of mass amounts of shops and. Businesse on a pluse side it helps find information out and start online buinesses ect but was it ever a good idea and Korea would be the same if the net did not excist

    • Anonymous

      Why do i smell a badly illiterate troll here?

      • mcgravier

        Probably 12 years old one… Just thumb down and forget.

  • freja

    Here you are in over your head ENIGMAX !
    I have been to the DPRK a few times. Beware that it is the victim of an absolutely mindblowing smear- and blackpainting campaign. For one thing – everyone there has a radio, and practically everyone a TV (not everyone wants a TV!) They have a like a massive intRAnet in the country, instead of free internet access. The fact that CAN share music on this shows that it is not as oppressive as announced. The state can’t and doesn’t want to punish people for minor infringements like owning South Korean music. People do not get sent willy-nilly to labour camps as the propaganda would have you believe. Things are getting better in the DPRK very fast and the North Koreans are PAINfully aware that life is materially better for the majority in South Korea. They genuinely want to stear clear of Western imperialistic influences. It’s South Korean music they want, their brother country – not American films.

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  • Dan Swift

    If I go to the store and buy a cd or a movie i will share it with whoever i want

  • Guest

    Don’t worry North Korea, the American gov will soon find a way to ruin the internet and censor it for everyone.

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  • Patrick Chenier

    That was very interesting. I was looking at stuff on North Korea recently and I was wondering what was going on with all that file sharing stuff. 

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