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Old 26-05-12, 19:28   #1
The Enigma
 
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Default Illegal File-Sharing Chips Away At North Korean Propaganda

Illegal File-Sharing Chips Away At North Korean Propaganda
by enigmax

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.


As I have pointed out before and is demonstrated in this article, ever greater and more extreme punishments on infringement have no effect. Here the NKDPR are risking 5 years in a prison camp to view material deemed illegal. So $150,000 per incident is going to turn people away from file sharing?

Notice that the theme here in the background, is the belief that education is the key to preventing it. That one escapee's teachings told her that the South Koreans were very poor and that was basically the reason to accept their lot in life.

The same sort of ideas peculate through our society with the copywrong group. You should be educated that file sharing is illegal. Kids should be educated in school that the rights of the copyright holder are important while any benefits of public domain are ignored and not a topic for dissemination.

None of this education crap will ever work. If you get right down to the core of it, everyone already knows and does it any way. They have no misconception about it's illegality. What the problem here is, is a lack of connection between one's life and that the corporation would have you believe that doesn't connect. It goes against basic truisms people share in common, no matter the geological place nor who rules the country. As such the government granted monopolies will never receive 100% compliance. No where near.

I've mentioned this in passing once before but let me take you back to buttons as a prime example of what will not work as a monopoly.


It is estimated that buttons were invented around 2000 BC as decorations, not as fasteners.

In 1250 AD the Button Makers Guild is formed and it becomes illegal for any commoner to wear buttons other than those of cloth or fabric covered ones.

For the next 150 years, people go crazy with the new fad of buttons.

In France in 1666, this case comes before the French court and the this demonstrates exactly where the RIAA is today...

"The question has come up whether a guild master of the weaving industry should be allowed to try an innovation in his product. The verdict: 'If a cloth weaver intends to process a piece according to his own invention, he must not set it on the loom, but should obtain permission from the judges of the town to employ the number and length of threads that he desires, after the question has been considered by four of the oldest merchants and four of the oldest weavers of the guild.'

Shortly after the matter of cloth weaving has been disposed of, the button makers guild raises a cry of outrage; the tailors are beginning to make buttons out of cloth, an unheard-of thing. The government, indignant that an innovation should threaten a settled industry, imposes a fine on the cloth-button makers. But the wardens of the button guild are not yet satisfied. They demand the right to search people's homes and wardrobes and fine and even arrest them on the streets if they are seen wearing these subversive goods."


Needless today you can look around and figure out all on your own who won that battle.
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Last edited by photostill; 26-05-12 at 19:37.
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