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North Korea Unveils Netflix-Like Service With Propaganda on Demand | North Korea Unveils Netflix-Like Service With Propaganda on Demand |
(about 17 hours later) | |
HONG KONG — Days before North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, successfully tested a ballistic missile that he said could hit parts of the continental United States, his reclusive regime unveiled another technical triumph: a Netflix-like streaming service. | HONG KONG — Days before North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, successfully tested a ballistic missile that he said could hit parts of the continental United States, his reclusive regime unveiled another technical triumph: a Netflix-like streaming service. |
Called Manbang, the service delivers on-demand videos to televisions through a set-top box, Korean Central Television said in a report last week. | Called Manbang, the service delivers on-demand videos to televisions through a set-top box, Korean Central Television said in a report last week. |
In the report, a narrator says that Manbang is further proof of North Korea’s “socialist cultural power,” which will allow its people to watch their country “make a leap forward every day, every hour.” | In the report, a narrator says that Manbang is further proof of North Korea’s “socialist cultural power,” which will allow its people to watch their country “make a leap forward every day, every hour.” |
Very few of the country’s roughly 25 million citizens are permitted access to the actual internet. Content that can be streamed is largely restricted to state-run television and propaganda-filled movies. | |
According to the report, in addition to news reports and updates on Mr. Kim’s daily activities, Manbang also offers language courses in English and Russian. | According to the report, in addition to news reports and updates on Mr. Kim’s daily activities, Manbang also offers language courses in English and Russian. |
Manbang was “elevating the people’s cultural life a step up by allowing them to watch what they want any time they want,” a man identified as Ju Dae-hyun, a telecommunications official in Sinuiju, a town near the Chinese border, said in the report. | Manbang was “elevating the people’s cultural life a step up by allowing them to watch what they want any time they want,” a man identified as Ju Dae-hyun, a telecommunications official in Sinuiju, a town near the Chinese border, said in the report. |
And Kim Kum-hee, a kindergarten teacher in Sariwon, said that Manbang’s video-on-demand service resolved the headache of children clamoring to binge-watch their favorite movies. “Now they are glued to the TV screen for hours a day,” she said. | And Kim Kum-hee, a kindergarten teacher in Sariwon, said that Manbang’s video-on-demand service resolved the headache of children clamoring to binge-watch their favorite movies. “Now they are glued to the TV screen for hours a day,” she said. |
North Korea’s ruling ideology, known as Juche, calls for self-reliance in all matters. In this spirit, the country has also said it developed its own computer operating system, Red Star, which appears to mimic Apple’s Mac OS X. | North Korea’s ruling ideology, known as Juche, calls for self-reliance in all matters. In this spirit, the country has also said it developed its own computer operating system, Red Star, which appears to mimic Apple’s Mac OS X. |
The country has also said it developed its own tablet computers, including the Android-based Samjiyon, according to North Korea Tech, a website that monitors the country’s technological strides. | The country has also said it developed its own tablet computers, including the Android-based Samjiyon, according to North Korea Tech, a website that monitors the country’s technological strides. |
North Koreans rely on smuggled electronics to watch overseas media, anecdotal reports suggest. The government is trying to rein in the illegal use of Notetels, small Chinese-made media players that can read smuggled DVDs or USB sticks, Radio Free Asia has said. | North Koreans rely on smuggled electronics to watch overseas media, anecdotal reports suggest. The government is trying to rein in the illegal use of Notetels, small Chinese-made media players that can read smuggled DVDs or USB sticks, Radio Free Asia has said. |
Netflix, which began an aggressive global expansion plan this year, has taken note of its newest competitor. On Thursday, its American Twitter account description read “Manbang knockoff.” | Netflix, which began an aggressive global expansion plan this year, has taken note of its newest competitor. On Thursday, its American Twitter account description read “Manbang knockoff.” |
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