North Korea blocks access to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube

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In news that is not April 1-related, North Korea has this week begun to block access to Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other websites in the country.

The AP, which has a bureau in North Korean capital Pyongyang, reports that the government named YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Voice of America, a number of South Korean websites, porn and gambling websites on a list of internet sites that will be blocked “for a certain period of time.” The announcement reportedly added that anyone trying to access the sites in an “improper” way or distribute “anti-republic data” would be punished, although it did not specify how.

North Korea is hardly a place for mainstream internet access — the country has a reported two million mobile phone users but internet access is reserved for government officials or other high-level positions — but the move is a further step to shut the country off and restrict access to information.

North Korea’s sole mobile operator, Koryolink, enabled mobile internet access for visitors in 2013 and — bar some apparent shutdowns and the occasional issue with Instagram — that has helped bring images and information from the world’s most isolated country to wider audiences. Blocking off these websites runs counter to that, although Instagram, which has includes a number of accounts accounts that share fascinating images from North Korea, remains accessible for now.

We’ve contacted Twitter, Facebook and Google for confirmation and comment.

Featured Image: Katherine Welles/Shutterstock
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/UXhNCKnGOvs/
North Korea blocks access to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube Reviewed by Unknown on 4/01/2016 Rating: 5

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