The network uses domain names under the .kp top level domain that are not usually accessible from the global Internet.[5] As of 2016, the network uses IPv4 addresses reserved for private networks in the 10.0.0.0/8 range, also known as 24-bit block as defined in RFC 1918.[5] North Koreans often find it more convenient to access sites by their IP address rather than by domain name using Latin characters.[5] Like the global Internet, the network hosts content accessible with web browsers, and provides an internal web search engine. It also provides email services and news groups.[6][7][8] The intranet is managed by the Korea Computer Center.[9][10]
Prior to 2006, North Koreans would use intranet chat rooms to organize meetups to play sports, such as basketball. Following an incident where, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Naenara, around 300 North Korean intranet users organized a flash mob at the Pyongyang Gymnasium, all chat rooms were removed from the North Korean intranet.[11] Regional chat rooms reportedly made a return in 2015.[19]
In 2013, Anonymous-affiliated hackers claimed to have broken into North Korea's intranet.[20] However, evidence for the claim was lacking.[21][22][23]
The first online shopping website was opened in 2015, and 22 such websites were available by 2021. The Central Bank of North Korea launched an electronic payment system in 2020.[25]
Content
As of 2014, the Kwangmyong network was estimated to have between about 1,000 and 5,500 websites.[15][26][8][27] In 2021, Max Fisher of Vox estimated that the number was about 5,000.[28]Excélsior also estimated the number at about 5,000 the following year.[29]
The Kwangmyong network is composed of many websites and services. Some sites host political and economic propaganda. Scientific and cultural information and fields of knowledge among other topics can be found elsewhere.[12][17][30][31] Over 30 million mostly scientific or technical documents were reportedly posted to the intranet as of 2007.[9]
Websites of various North Korean government agencies including provincial government, cultural institutions, major universities and libraries, some local schools, and some of the major industrial and commercial organizations are accessible to users.[11][26] The network also contains (mostly science-related) websites from the open Internet that are downloaded, reviewed and censored.[7]
An internal emailing service is available on the Kwangmyong network.[6][11][16][32] A search engine is in use for browsing the Kwangmyong intranet.[8][14][33][17] The search engine reportedly goes by the name "Naenara", which means "Our Country".[26][34] A Facebook-like social networking service in use by professors and university students existed as of 2013, and was used to post birthday messages.[35]CNN reported in 2017 that a "North Korean equivalent to Facebook" exists.[36]Message boards are known to exist on the network.[37][28] An IPTV video-streaming service called Manbang (만방), Korean for "Everyone", was reportedly launched in August 2016, though the name Manbang appeared in North Korean technology as early as 2013. It is accessed by a Wi-Fi-enabled set-top box. It can be accessed through smartphones and tablet computers.[16][38][39] Reportedly the Kwangmyong has been used for online dating.[33][34][36] Chat rooms were used by North Koreans interested in sports until 2006, when the chat rooms were removed.[11] Regional chat rooms were added in 2015.[19]
Domestic state news services are available on the network, such as the Korean Central News Agency, Rodong Sinmun, and Voice of Korea.[17][16][40] Scientific research websites of academic and scholarly works devoted to the network are served through web-based academic exchanges and information sharing such as the Academy of Sciences for Science and Technology (Korean: 과학기술전시관; Hancha: 科學技術展示館)[41] and the Academy of Sciences for Medical Science (Korean: 의학과학정보센터).[42] An electronic library is present on the network, which also hosts video lectures for various topics.[11][43]
Some e-commerce and e-banking websites exist on the network.[32][44][45][46] Some video games also exist on the intranet.[11][33][18][34] One of the games available on the Kwangmyong is Korean chess.[17][26] Phones provide access to e-books and mobile payment.[47][48] Some cultural websites are among the few .kp domain websites which have been openly accessible to foreigners through the global Internet, such as at least one culinary site and one displaying the country's film industry.[49] Other services in use on the intranet include dictionaries, telehealth, and text messaging services.[32] Reportedly a travel website allowed North Koreans to plan vacations within the country.[50]
Network access
Kwangmyong is designed to be accessible only from within North Korea.[32][51][52] Access is available within major cities and counties, as well as universities and major industrial and commercial organizations.[38] For example, a library at the Pyongyang Sci-Tech Complex provides access to the intranet, and is reportedly used by different types of people, including factory workers, children and researchers for various purposes.[32][53] About 3,000 computer terminals are usable there.[54] The intranet is also accessible from another library at the Grand People's Study House.[34]
The first "internet café" (or "intranet cafe") in North Korea was opened in Pyongyang, where one may access the country's intranet services. It opened in 2002, near Kwangbok station, and has about 100 computers.[55][56][34] It was opened by a Seoul company named Hoonnet, and a North Korean company named Jangsaeng General Trade Company.[9][57] These cafes, also known as "PC rooms" or "Information Technology Stores", began appearing across North Korea as soon as the early 2000s, and can be accessed for a fee.[11][33][18] The cafes provide other paid services as well, such as computing classes. As of 2005, the price for accessing these services was considered prohibitively expensive for the average North Korean citizen, according to Daily NK.[58]
The process of installing an approved personal computer in North Korean homes which would be capable of accessing the intranet requires inspection and authorization from local government authorities.[11][19][59][60] As of 2010, an estimated 200,000 such personal computers were in Pyongyang private homes, and access to the Kwangmyong is more common among people in cities compared to those in rural areas.[11][61][62] A 2017 survey found that 19% of households had a computer but only 1% had a computer with access to Kwangmyong. The figure for households in possession of a computer with Kwangmyong access was 5% in Pyongyang.[63] However, Kwangmyong can also be accessed on mobile phones. As of 2018, it was estimated that 18-20% of the population had mobile phones with Kwangmyong access.[25]
Kwangmyong has 24-hour unlimited access by dial-up telephone line.[38] In addition to access from personal computers, the national intranet may be accessed from mobile devices on 3G network.[53] As of 2013[update], a number of Android-based tablet computer products, including the Samjiyon tablet computer, can be purchased in North Korea that give access to Kwangmyong.[64] A 2017 estimate put the number of mobile phones in North Korea at between 2.5 and 3 million.[32] In 2020, another estimate put the number of mobile phone users at 4.5 million.[65] Mobile phones are the more common way for North Koreans to access the Kwangmyong intranet. Access to the global Internet or phone numbers outside of North Korea is not permitted aside from highest-ranked government officials and certain employees of the Korea Computer Center.[32][51][66][67] Like personal computers, phones must be approved by authorities.[32][68] According to Radio Free Asia, the government began requiring cell phone users to install surveillance software through an app to access the intranet in 2022. The app, called the Kwangmyong app, connects users to their subscriptions to the state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper and other educational and informational services but also contains surveillance software which allows the Ministry of State Security and other law enforcement agencies to track their locations and see if they're accessing foreign content.[69]
In 2018, North Korea unveiled a new Wi-Fi service called Mirae ("Future"), which allowed mobile devices to access the intranet network in Pyongyang.[70]
In December 2023, North Korea started to deploy 4G network for mobile device to access the intranet network.[71][72][73][74]
Languages
The network uses Korean as the main interface language, though the government's web portal (Naenara), is multilingual.[52][75] There is a dictionary available to users for translation between Korean and Russian, Chinese, English, French, German and Japanese, with a database containing at least 1,700,000 words, to assist users who may not be familiar with foreign languages.[76]
Different websites on the intranet may be available in different sets of languages. A website that sells postage stamps is available in Korean, English, and Chinese.[77] The writings of the Kim family are available in Korean, Japanese, Russian, and Chinese.[17]
Information control
Kwangmyong is designed to be used only within North Korea, and is referred to as an intranet.[52] Kwangmyong prevents domestic users within North Korea from freely accessing foreign content or information and typically prevents foreigners from accessing domestic content.[16][45] According to Daily NK, it "prevents the leak of classified data" and "functions as a form of information censorship, preventing undesirable information from being accessed".[78] Thus, sensitive topics and information are unlikely to surface on Kwangmyong due to the absence of a link to the outside world and the censorship that occurs. Kwangmyong is maintained and monitored by government-related entities.[79] However, large amounts of material from the global Internet ends up on Kwangmyong, following processing.[59] The operating systems of government-approved phones reject access to any applications that are not also approved by the government.[32]
While foreigners in North Korea are generally not allowed to access Kwangmyong, they may have access to the global Internet.[16][45][46][79][80] For security reasons networks with Internet and intranet access are air gapped so that computers with Internet access are not housed in the same location as computers with Kwangmyong access.[7]
Given that there is no direct connection to the outside Internet, unwanted information cannot enter the network. Information is filtered and processed by government agencies before being hosted on the North Korean Intranet.[81]Myanmar and Cuba also use a similar network system that is separated from the rest of the Internet, and Iran has been reported as having future plans to implement such a network, though it is claimed that it would work alongside the Internet and would not replace it.[82][83][84]
List of sites
Below is a list of sites that were listed on Kwangmyong's website portal in 2016.[5]
Below is a list of sites that are not directly listed on www.sciteco.aca.kp (the Kwangmyong website portal) in 2016 and sites that have been confirmed to have been created on Kwangmyong after 2016.
^"《만물상》전자상업홈페지 사용자들속에서 인기" [Among the users of the "Manmulsang" electronic commerce homepage]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"인기를 끌고있는 전자상업홈페지 《만물상》" [Popular e-commerce homepage "Manmulsang"]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"주목을 받고있는 새 전자상업홈페지《만물상》" [New e-commerce homepage "Manmulsang" is attracting attention]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"《만물상》전자상업홈페지 사용자들속에서 인기" ["Manmulsang" electronic commerce homepage is popular among the users]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"《관광》홈페지 새로 개설, 공화국주민들에 대한 국내관광주문봉사 진행" [Newly opened homepage "Tourism", domestic tourism order service for Republic residents in progress]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"《조선우표》홈페지 새로 개설, 우표문화의 발전을 힘있게 추동" [Newly-opened homepage "Korean Stamps", powerfully promoting the development of stamp culture]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"이동통신망 《조선우표》 홈페지 새로 개설" [The newly-opened mobile webpage "Korean Stamps"]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"병렬계산봉사홈페지 《은정》을 통한 구름계산봉사 진행할 전망" [The computing service homepage “Affection” (Unjong) for cloud computing service]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 16 January 2020. Retrieved 2025-02-01.
^"인기를 끌고있는 전자상점홈페지 《은파산》" [Popular e-commerce homepage "Silver Mountain"]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 13 December 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"홈페지 《생물공학》이 새로 개설" [Newly-opened website "Bio-engineering"]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^ ab"산림조성사업에 이바지하는 《황금산》, 《푸른 산》홈페지들" ["Golden Mountain" and "Blue Mountain" homepages that contribute to forestation projects]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"수산업발전에 기여할수 있는 《이채어경》홈페지" ["Brilliant Fishing" homepage contributing to the development of the fishing industry]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"신의주화장품공장에서 《봄향기》홈페지 개설, 사용자들속에서 인기" [Sinuiju Cosmetics Factory opens “Spring Fragrance” website that is popular among users]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"농업생산에 도움을 주는 《황금벌》홈페지" [The "Golden Field" website that helps agricultural production]. arirangmeari.com (in Korean). Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
^"체육정보열람체계 《체육열풍》이 개설되였다" [The sports information viewing system “Sports Craze” has been opened]. DPRK Today (in Korean). Retrieved 2022-08-14.
^"육아원 원아들 보육을 위한 홈페지 개설" [Opening of a homepage for childcare for children in orphanages]. Arirang Meari (via KCNA Watch) (in Korean). Retrieved 2025-02-02.