North Korea launches 'secure' email

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North Korea has launched an email service that "guarantees the privacy of correspondence", although it's likely very few North Koreans have Internet access at all.

The report from the official North Korean news agency, Korean Central News Agency, which is itself run from a Japanese-domain Web site, was sparse on details. Like the country itself, North Korea online remains heavily restricted.

The dispatch said that "the email service guarantees the privacy of correspondence as it has a network security system," although no technical details were included. It did say that it had "a large transmission ban", which appears to mean high-speed bandwidth. The system is operating from North Korea's International Communications Center and works over local dial-up with a user name and password, and is free of charge.

How many Internet users, or even how many computer users there are in North Korea, remains unknown, although an Associated Press wire agency report on the email service said that few are believed to have any access. Leader Kim Jong II is known to be online, and has repeatedly mentioned the importance of computer technology. Foreign visitors can connect their computers through international phone lines at a few North Korean hotels and an Internet cafe reportedly recently opened in Pyongyang.

Rumours of North Korea training hackers to attack South Korea have been circulating. Six South Korean activists were arrested in 2001 for exchanging non-government-authorised emails with North Korean officials, the AP report said. It remains illegal for any South Koreans to email their northern neighbors without government permission.

The two Koreas have remained technically at war since the 1950-53 civil war.

Talkback

Quoting from the article: "It did say that it had "a large transmission ban", which appears to mean high-speed bandwidth."

My guess is that it means a restriction on mass mailing, e.g., to prevent SPAM mailers from using their service.

via Facebook 2 December, 2003 21:45
Reply

I would guess that a 'large transmission ban' means that long messages can't be sent?
As for 'high speed bandwidth', that's gobble-de-gook!
'high speed' is used erroneously to mean 'high rate', while 'bandwidth' is erroneously used to mean either 'system capacity' or 'maximum throughput'.
If you want a high speed connection, try using a wireless set up - the radio waves convey the data at 186,000 miles a second (3 x 10 to the eighth power metres per second).

via Facebook 4 December, 2003 10:31
Reply

Just Looking For a pen pal. Interested in almost anything. Sports,World views,

via Facebook 26 May, 2004 17:03
Reply

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