HomeTechnologyEvery 5 minutes, this smuggled North Korean phone takes screenshots, you will be horrified to know why

Every 5 minutes, this smuggled North Korean phone takes screenshots, you will be horrified to know why

A smartphone smuggled out of North Korea is revealing just how deeply the government controls its citizens — down to every word they type and every screen they see.

June 03, 2025 / 11:42 IST
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Representational image/ courtesy: Unsplash
Representational image/ courtesy: Unsplash

Our smartphones are heavily protected. We lock them with PINs, Face ID, or all kinds of security measures to keep our secrets safe from hackers, scammers, or anyone curious about the little details of our lives. Apps like WhatsApp even use end-to-end encryption, meaning not even the app itself can read our messages. That gives us some peace of mind — or so we think. But did you know there’s a country where smartphones actually take screenshots without the user’s permission every five minutes? Sounds like a digital cage, right? Well, for people living in North Korea, this is their harsh reality.

A smartphone smuggled out of North Korea is revealing just how deeply the government controls its citizens — down to every word they type and every screen they see. At first glance, the phone looks like any modern device. But underneath, it’s loaded with software designed to watch and control its user.

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The phone was shown in a BBC video, with an animated North Korean flag waving on the screen as it powered on. While the exact brand wasn’t confirmed, the interface looked a lot like phones made by Huawei or Honor, except the phones are heavily modified to suit the North Korean regime’s strict rules.

Amongst many odd features the phone has, one creepy feature was that the phone automatically censored certain words. For example, if someone typed “oppa” — a common South Korean word for “older brother” or “boyfriend” — the phone would change it to “comrade” and pop up a warning that “oppa” can only mean “older sibling.” Similarly, typing “South Korea” would be replaced by “puppet state,” matching the government’s harsh official language.