Slashdot Mirror


North Korea Introduces 'Secure' E-mail

An anonymous reader sent in a strange little story running over at ZD that discusses North Korea's new secure email system. There's a lot of strange bits in there about trained North Korean hackers, and the fact that North Korea's news agency is hosted in Japan.

10 of 255 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And this means... by KrispyKringle · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that when you get mail from a `Korean' country code, the registry means South Korea. I, personally, can't remember ever seeing North Korean spam.

  2. hahaha by minus_273 · · Score: 2, Informative

    talk about liberal media! these are the top stories on the N Korean news site:

    U.S. Urged to Accept Simultaneous Action and Package Solution
    Abolition of SL in S. Korea Demanded
    U.S. Imperialists' Aerial Espionage on DPRK
    Japan Not Qualified to Participate in Six-way Talks
    Meeting against Evil Laws Held in S. Korea
    Yakbab, Korean Food

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  3. Re:Off Black list? Nope... by KrispyKringle · · Score: 2, Informative

    South Korea is probably who you're thinking of. I've never seen North Korean spam. As the article points out, most North Koreans probably don't own computers.

  4. Re:Hard to enforce.. by tftp · · Score: 2, Informative
    Well, the article says that they jailed six people recently for this offense. I would assume they don't watch everyone, but known activists can be easily monitored.

    However this still does not tell me which of Koreas is more democratic. And this prohibition does not seem to be of any use whatsoever, unless South is paranoid about spies...

  5. Re:Hard to enforce.. by RevMike · · Score: 3, Informative
    this prohibition does not seem to be of any use whatsoever, unless South is paranoid about spies...

    Indeed they are extremely concerned about spies and sabateurs (sp?). North Korea continues to be responsible for many provocative acts, including the murder of military personnel inside the the DMZ, the digging of invasion tunnels under the border, terrorist attacks in South Korea, etc.

    The South has good reason to be paranoid.

  6. Re:Hard to enforce.. by jedrek · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, North Korea is not democratic at ALL, so South Korea (where you have elections, protests, etc) is the more democratic.

    As far as being paranoid, I think the South is quite paranoid and with good reason. North Korean spies reguarly travel into the south, through a large network of tunnels under the DMZ. NK agents have kidnapped Japanese and South Koreans dozens of times in the past 40 years. South Korea is often infiltrated by North Korean spies who get into the country via small submarines.

    From what I understand, cold war Berlin was nothing compared to what's been going on in Korea since the 60s.

  7. I'm a pure home grown Korean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... and this scares me. Although I spent most of my teen age years + university life over in Canada, I've lived in Korea for good 14 years. As I grew up, there are bad and goodo things to be heard about people "up" there. One thing, I heard was the rumour that researches results achieved by North Korean top university happens to be better than the best university in South. I've also heard about the top University in North actually does have a better ranking (think North American university rankings published annually) than the top university in South. Now, these are my conspiracy theories about why the posted story is a possible scenario. 1) North Korea maybe forging research result. BUT they do not seem to joke about Nuclear bombs :-) I think they do have potential to acquire "bleeding-edge" cryptography, but probably will take a while to mature. 2) ONLY a few selected children of high ranking government officials get educated. And I assume these are very smart people since the government in places like North Korea wouldn't waste money. 3) There have been spies from North in South. (duh!) BUT some of these spies lived their lives as a professor/researcher at some university, etc etc. (this is TRUE, scary) What else could have they been doing? 4) North Korea will likely disobey any laws about cryptography exports and so on. The algorithm and all the math required are published. I assume using/implementing them just requires one smart brain. :-) I guess this point essentially applies to terrorists as well. 5) Don't forget all that money South gave to North a few years ago. Sure, it wouldn't have been enough money to last for long, but it was cerntainly known that a) North Korea didn't spend money for the public b) The amount of "financial aid" given to North was enough to make South Korean money reservoir dry. People actually blame the _previous_ president for this. 6) The site is hosted in _Japan_ *gasp*. Believe it or not, Japanese always seem to win computer hackerish war over Koreans. For my short period of exposure to Open Source/BSD community tells me that Japanese are faaar deeper into hacker community then Koreans. What doees this mean? I'm probably about to say, North Korean could've got some Japanese hackers working secretly? One interesting note though. I believe North Koreans have their webpages too (for probably 3 years?). It's been a while since I heard of debates in Korea about "Hmm. Should we allow our South dudes to see these North Korean webpages?" I think the resolution was to require government permission to access those pages. SOrry about long conspiracy theory. :-) And I'll post anonymously because I don't want to get arrested!

  8. Re:North Korean Insanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Newsmax isn't a source I'd quote. It's your typical frothing-at-the-mouth partisan propaganda outlet that'll print anything that it fits their agenda, no matter how ridiculous.

  9. Crap source by Any+Web+Loco · · Score: 2, Informative

    Dude, this is based on a report by the Herald Sun for chrissakes! The Herald Sun is a zero-cred newspaper - it's the kinda paper tat has "B-52 Bomber found on Moon" as a headline (actually it didn't, but it's STILL that kind of paper).

  10. Re:DictatorMail.com ? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Informative

    Horrors like traffic, I guess.

    List of "unspeakable horrors" they must be protected from witnessing:
    BMW's
    Jordache jeans
    Walkman radios
    Fast food restaurants
    Street lights
    Public and residential telephones
    Home electrictity
    Indoor plumbing
    Food

    The sight of those items could be quite traumatic.

    Unfortunately I'm not joking about anything on that list. I will address electricity and food in particular. Take a look at this NASA image: The Earth at night. It shows man-made light sources, effectively a combination of population density and development level. North Korea and South Korea have essentially identical enviornments, resources, and climate and similar population levels. North Korea is a black hole with an amazingly sharp line at the North/South border. No street lights, no electrictity, nothing.

    North Korea has lost a signifigant fraction of it's population to starvation, roughly 1.7% of the population dying each year to starvation. That starvation is primarily because their economy is in shambles and they are diverting about 30% of their gross national product to supporting the worlds third-largest army. (China is #1 and U.S. is #2) Most countries only spend about 3% of their GNP supporting a military. That 30% level is crushing and leaves no money for roads, farming equipment, or even food.

    North Korea is in the depths of paranoid isolation. They believe they need that army to prevent imminent invasion. They have stated their desire to use that army to "liberate" South Korea. Considering the 1.7% yearly starvation rate and considering the satallite photo, somehow I don't quite think South Korea has any desire for that sort of "liberation".

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.