> Options to share via Bluetooth and 3G and a third unknown option that lets you enter an address
That option is labeled 통보문 (tongbomun), North Korean for "text message," and the second screen asks for the address and phone number, presumably of the contact to send a text message to. That's likely why the app has the ic_launcher_smsmms.png icon.
... although in the case of 통보문 there are no exact matches. It appears in KEEK.db in the definitions of various English entries related to messaging, and in biyak.db as a component of messaging-related terms.
So you would need to query with something like
SELECT * FROM dictionary WHERE word LIKE '%통보문%' OR definition LIKE '%통보문%';
for maximum recall.
(Aside: I came across that blog post while looking for a Korean dictionary I could just download and use offline; for better or worse, North Korea seems big on offline-first applications. I ended up repackaging it as an HTML file I can use easily on my phone: https://github.com/Yorwba/dic.html )
Are there any suspicious blanks in the map or missing buildings? Apparently the North Korean leadership don't like to be reminded of the unfinished Ryugyong Hotel[1], or more prosaically there may be missing military sites and the like.
[1] From Wikipedia: "The government manipulated official photographs in order to remove the unfinished structure from the skyline, and excluded it from printed maps of Pyongyang" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryugyong_Hotel)
>However, not everything is detailed. In addition to numerous buildings having no labels, sensitive areas of the city, such as the Korean Workers’ Party complex in central Pyongyang and the Mirim Parade Training Ground, have no details, roads or building outlines.
Instead of trying to decode the password from the huge decompiled file, can you use a debugger to intercept the call to sqliteopen? Or shim it out?
I’m not familiar with Android development enough to know this is possible but this is what I’d do in x86 world - so just thought I’d offer a suggestion
> An older version of the app, version 1.1, was previously detailed by Alek Sigley, an Australian student who previously lived in Pyongyang while studying at Kim Il Sung University.
How does that work? Do they just let foreigners into their University? And does this get accepted in any western state?
Also, good luck ever working for a defense company or anything sensitive after that, I guess.
On my vacation in Cuba some years ago, I found out that there are quite many westerners going there to learns Spanish in Cuban educational institutions. There were also university students who were there to participate in vocational education in Cuba-specific product manufacturing like rum. AFAIK even in Soviet times there were friendship programs and partnerships with the West to build civil ties which facilitated student exchanges etc, so I wouldn't be surprised if there are for DPRK too. I also recall something about joint programs with Korea/DPRK/EU/US to do production in special zones inside DPRK.
Except for Americans, the place was full of western tourists like me and my HSBC cards worked just fine. Those insulated places might not be as insulated as the general perception leads you to believe. The internet situation was PIA, though I hear its much better now.
The situation with North Korea is a lot different. North Korea is blocking itself quite up and very restrictive who can enter the country and what they can do.
It's tuition-free and the state provides room and board. Part of the admission criteria is that you have to be from an underprivileged community and you take an oath to go back to serve that community.
They have accepted folks from poor parts of the US, as well.
What do you mean “accepted”? Is it illegal to learn in a country even if it’s a dictatorship? Last two Kims and The Sister got education in Europe, btw. New kids will do so too and then will return to reign.
Universities have to be accredited for other universities to accept their transfer credits.
If companies want you to have a four-year degree then they have to believe you when you say you have one.
> Is it illegal to learn in a country even if it’s a dictatorship?
It's illegal for US citizens to do a lot of things with North Korea specifically, if you don't have permission first. That's how economic sanctions work.
The point is to make it harder for them to raise money to spend on building nukes. It's not meant to change their mind by making them feel bad or something.
The stated purpose of these economic sanctions is to degrade the ability of an authoritarian regime from functioning to reduce the threat that it poses in the region and bring about political and economic change.
Sorry for the unclear question, I wasn’t sure how to phrase that and didn’t look it up to confirm. I meant „can you transfer any credits to a western university“.
I suppose that credits earned at a North Korean university are not accepted by any other university. However, having lived in North Korea and having an insider's view of the country certainly has its advantages.
> Studying at Kim Il Sung University, foreign students and apprentices can not only acquire the Korean language but also have a better understanding of Korea's time-honored history and its thrilling reality.
“Thrilling reality” is an interesting end to that sentence.
This BBC article says it took a couple years for him to get in: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-48782235
It sounds to me like he is one of those people who just fell in love with the idea of this isolated country and then found out the truth the hard way.
That option is labeled 통보문 (tongbomun), North Korean for "text message," and the second screen asks for the address and phone number, presumably of the contact to send a text message to. That's likely why the app has the ic_launcher_smsmms.png icon.