![]() ![]() intelligence report disclosed today by Public Intelligence. To break past the firewall, the North jumped into social media this summer, according to an U.S. ![]() South Korea has an aggressive effort to block its citizens from accessing the North's Korean-language online content. Only Pyongyang didn't make that decision because of its fondness for tweeting. Now, it's got a YouTube channel and Facebook, Flickr and Twitter accounts to promote the glory of its homebrew "Juche System" ideology. But sometime this year, the hermetic Stalinist ruling clique decided that sort of online communication was too archaic and one-way. It used to be that if you wanted propaganda from North Korea that teetered on the edge of sanity, the official Korea Central News Agency was your browser's prime destination.
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