It'll be curious to see how far North Korea will go on this. As embassies, under the Vienna Convention, the people within are supposed to possess some latitude in regards to matters within their walls, but NK could also say their affairs are affecting things outside the walls and declare the people responsible for these "breaches" personae non gratae.
NORKS ban Wi-Fi and satellite internet at embassies
North Korea has sent a stern request to foreign embassies, asking them to stop using WiFi and satellite internet services within their walls. NKNews.org reports that the hermit kingdom's State Radio Regulatory Department has written to diplomatic missions to remind them that licences are required to operate radio equipment. …
COMMENTS
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Friday 12th September 2014 04:37 GMT silent_count
Looking at who does have an embassy in NK, I imagine the Russians and Chinese would tell Pyongyang where to go and the others would sooner shut up shop and go home before they give the North Koreans access to their communications. This is weak sabre rattling because Kim Jong-un found out that Julian Assange had more column inches devoted to him in the past few weeks.
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Friday 12th September 2014 06:17 GMT Suricou Raven
It wouldn't be hard to get an encrypted link even over a horrible NK phone line. NK is so locked down that ordinary people can't make international calls, but I'm sure embassies have some way. They couldn't function otherwise. It would be a huge inconvenience for the embassy staff though, who would be all but cut-off from the rest of the world.
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Friday 12th September 2014 11:47 GMT aBloke FromEarth
Re: Who the fuck cares?
The irony of you going to the effort of writing a comment (and thereby negating your "who cares?") aside...
I suspect the embassy workers do care. And the few UN teams that are there. Visitors who do international business need to access the outside world, too (not just Russian/Chinese but you'd be surprised how many foreign companies operate in NK).
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Friday 12th September 2014 10:06 GMT Velv
D'oh!
Doesn't sound like the government knows much about spying.
Tardy sysadmins "accidentally" leave open wifi hotspots.
Locals "find" open connections and have access to the uncontrolled Internet
NK spies didn't think to slurp the traffic and catch the "rebels". Even google figured out there was a benefit to capturing all passing wifi traffic for later analysis
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Saturday 13th September 2014 17:56 GMT Brad Ackerman
The good old days of TVRO BUDs
Back in the prime of C-band antennas, there were plenty of people who liked to watch all those feeds (editing, backhaul, whatever). I don't know how old the story you refer to is, but I'd guess that somebody, who may or may not have been affiliated with the agency, was watching the feed in an unofficial capacity and passed on the information to CIA's public affairs office.
(Did the clipping services monitor those feeds as well? If so, the pre-broadcast feed could have been obtained that way.)
Since there's no icon for "I guess this comment makes me an old fart", it's black helicopters.
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Friday 12th September 2014 12:30 GMT Anonymous Coward
the good news is, if you use iOS8 in PyongYang
then luckily iOS8* randomises your Wi-Fi MAC address - prior to connection to the Wi-Fi network.
So as you walk around then you won't immediately be SMERSHed.... but as your Wi-Fi connection device otherwise has a worldwide unique MAC address - as soon as the NK counter-intel have slurped/airmon'ed enough 'free' Wi-Fi packets then their Netizens will have had it. Terminal.
*of course, for all I know it's death-by-stoning to have a device capable of running iOS8!
the alternative is to use TAILS, small 'nix netbook, download MACchanger
# macchanger -m b3:a5:0e:56:ed:f2 eth0
Current MAC: 31:cd:cb:6c:62:cd (unknown)
Faked MAC: b3:a5:0e:56:ed:f2 (unknown)