Every text watched, every word changed: Inside Kim Jong Un’s phone surveillance network

Every text watched, every word changed: Inside Kim Jong Un’s phone surveillance network

A smuggled North Korean smartphone has exposed how tightly the regime monitors and censors its citizens. According to a BBC report, the device blocks South Korean language, autocorrects phrases like “Oppa” to “Comrade,” and secretly takes screenshots every five minutes. These images are stored in hidden folders only accessible to state authorities. Radios and phones are sealed against modification, with any exposure to foreign culture seen as a crime. Testimonies from defectors show increasing repression under Kim Jong Un's leadership. | Source: The Economic Times

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