In North Korea, your phone secretly takes screenshots every 5 minutes for government surveillance
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I'm surprised this isn't a lemmy.world comment
?
Well, at least we're on a .world community. I'm doing my part!
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Wait, N. Koreans have phones?
So they can play the Diablo mobile game then?
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This is why my TV is on a separate VLAN (with no internet access) and I use an Nvidia Shield for streaming. I haven't seen any indication that the Shield does anything like this.
Yeah, there is no reason for me to be connecting my TV to the internet. I use a HTPC which is much better for streaming than the TV's built-in apps.
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Better than recall. No need for special hardware like an NPU, nor does it keep asking you to sign in.
/s
An NPU isn't required for something like recall, it just makes running local models more efficient.
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The one I use is FOSS software that largely just stores a dictionary of used words. FUTO Keyboard isn't perfect, but it is decent.
If I read somewhere correctly, they're also the first to open source their swipe dataset:
https://huggingface.co/datasets/futo-org/swipe.futo.orgYou can also contribute and help out with their dataset here:
https://swipe.futo.org/ -
The North Korean government's totalitarianism predates Ninteen Eighty-Four. North Korea might have been an input for Nineteen Eighty-Four, mind...
Damn Orwell was so prescient that he based his book on a country that didn't even exist yet
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Graphene is open source. I hope someone who can read what computers digest as code can make sense of it and give it the gold star.
Did you also build it from source?
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They can't see much through the electrical tape over the lens.
That's what you think, but then they just use the wifi to get a 3d image.
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Not the best sources, a phone smuggled by a South Korean-based organization that is funded by the US National Endowment for Democracy and reported by state owned BBC, both of which are enemies of NK, and nothing in this article is verifiable. I'm not saying this to promote anything about NK but just from a journalistic perspective this article doesn't prove much.
BBC is a pretty reputable source.
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Sounds like windows recall...
frequently stopping young people on the streets to inspect their phones and review text messages for banned language
I'm really tired of people saying "both sides are the same" when it comes to western capitalist exploitation vs eastern totalitarian authoritarianism.
It's ironically so privileged to even make the comparison because if it were the same, you wouldn't have been allowed to make this comment.
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Looks around modern day
You uh.....you think N Korea is the only ones?
They're definitely among the worst.
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A smartphone smuggled out of North Korea is offering a rare – and unsettling – glimpse into the extent of control Kim Jong Un's regime exerts over its citizens, down to the very words they type. While the device appears outwardly similar to any modern smartphone, its software reveals a far more oppressive reality.
The phone was featured in a BBC video, which showed it powering on with an animated North Korean flag waving across the screen. While the report did not specify the brand, the design and user interface closely resembled those of a Huawei or Honor device.It's unclear whether these companies officially sell phones in North Korea, but if they do, the devices are likely customized with state-approved software designed to restrict functionality and facilitate government surveillance.
One of the more revealing – and darkly amusing – features was the phone's automatic censorship of words deemed problematic by the state. For instance, when users typed oppa, a South Korean term used to refer to an older brother or a boyfriend, the phone automatically replaced it with comrade. A warning would then appear, admonishing the user that oppa could only refer to an older sibling.
Typing "South Korea" would trigger another change. The phrase was automatically replaced with "puppet state," reflecting the language used in official North Korean rhetoric.
Then came the more unsettling features. The phone silently captured a screenshot every five minutes, storing the images in a hidden folder that users couldn't access. According to the BBC, authorities could later review these images to monitor the user's activity.
The device was smuggled out of North Korea by Daily NK, a Seoul-based media outlet specializing in North Korean affairs. After examining the phone, the BBC confirmed that the censorship mechanisms were deeply embedded in its software. Experts say this technology is designed not only to control information but also to reinforce state messaging at the most personal level.
Smartphone usage has grown in North Korea in recent years, but access remains tightly controlled. Devices cannot connect to the global internet and are subject to intense government surveillance.
The regime has reportedly intensified efforts to eliminate South Korean cultural influence, which it views as subversive. So-called "youth crackdown squads" have been deployed to enforce these rules, frequently stopping young people on the streets to inspect their phones and review text messages for banned language.
Some North Korean escapees have shared that exposure to South Korean dramas or foreign radio broadcasts played a key role in their decision to flee the country. Despite the risks, outside media continues to be smuggled in – often via USB sticks and memory cards hidden in food shipments. Much of this effort is supported by foreign organizations.
Why doesn't China, North Korea's biggest trading partner, pressure them to be less authoritarian?
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Why doesn't China, North Korea's biggest trading partner, pressure them to be less authoritarian?
They don't want to be like the US
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frequently stopping young people on the streets to inspect their phones and review text messages for banned language
I'm really tired of people saying "both sides are the same" when it comes to western capitalist exploitation vs eastern totalitarian authoritarianism.
It's ironically so privileged to even make the comparison because if it were the same, you wouldn't have been allowed to make this comment.
I didn't say both sides are the same. I made a stupid joke about a garbage operating system and the garbage company that runs it.
And your example of stopping people on the streets to inspect their phones doesn't really do a great job at making the argument you're trying to make. We have ICE running around and throwing people into contracted prisons even when they have proof of citizenship. We are trafficking people to foreign concentration camps. We are rocketing at light speed to a techno fascist authoritarian state and the level of surveillance we are under is increasing at a mind boggling pace.
So we aren't the same, and the people currently in charge are striving to make the differences smaller every day.
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in the west too our phones spy on us but everyone knows, everyone thinks it’s bad, and yet nobody cares
well, I don't have anything to hide. Do you?
edit: because the sarcasm was lost on some, I am not advocating for this message.
I am mocking it.
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All mobile manufacturers could be doing this too. All of the SoCs are proprietary black boxes as are the modems.
I ve heard this a lot, how are modems black boxes?
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I switched off my iphone autocorrect years ago for tge same reasons
for tge same
We noticed.
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I ve heard this a lot, how are modems black boxes?
No hardware documentation whatsoever. We don't know what registers and instructions exist at the lowest levels.
As far as I am aware, there is no way to totally shut off and verify all cellular connections made, like to pass all traffic through a logged filter.
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I call that a normal day at Google or Meta
At least you can choose not to use their services. Not much choosing going on in North Korea
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Did you also build it from source?
GrapheneOS has reproducible builds.
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