Quick warning here. This episode is dark and intended for mature audiences. This episode talks about torture and sexual assault. It doesn't get super graphical where you may vomit from it, but it does come up.
Yunmi Park was born in 1993 in North Korea. She grew up with her mother, father, and sister in a small house near the Chinese border. In 2007, Yunmi's older sister had escaped from North Korea by herself. Nobody knew what happened to her or where she was. Her family didn't even know if she was alive or not.
Yang Mi and her mother decided it was time to risk their lives and escape from North Korea too. They paid someone to smuggle them into China, leaving their father behind, knowing full well that if they got caught trying to leave North Korea, they would likely go to prison.
So they crossed into China. But even China was not safe for them. If the Chinese police or government catches North Korean defectors, they send them back to North Korea. So Yanmian or mother had to stay hidden while in China and rely on whoever was kind enough to help them.
But unfortunately, there's a really bad sex and human trafficking problem in China. And North Korean defectors are especially vulnerable because they're so desperate, and the Chinese government does not grant them refugee status. Yunmi and her mother were captured by one of these sex trafficking rings. Yunmi was 13, and her captor wanted to have sex with her.
But her mother begged him not to and ultimately let herself get raped in order to spare Yunmi. Each day, Yunmi and her mother tried to find ways to escape out of their situation in China. At this point, Yunmi was 13 and sold into a sex trafficking ring for 300 US dollars.
She was separated from her mother, too. So imagine how scared she must have been. She was alive, but she was terrified every day. At some point, her father came to look for them and found Yunmi in China, but he was very sick. And shortly upon finding Yunmi, he died.
She cremated her own father secretly at 3am, so she wouldn't be caught. She continued on her journey to escape both North Korea and her enslavers in China. The best option she had was to find a way to get all the way to Mongolia, where they don't send North Koreans back.
If she could get to Mongolia, she thought she'd be safe. But this is about a thousand miles to travel. It's like going from Florida to New York all while staying hidden without money and in a country that you don't speak the language. But she was determined.
her life depended on it. So she escaped from her enslavers and captors and began trekking across China towards Mongolia. Again, she's just 13 years old. She would move at night in the freezing cold with only the stars to guide her. And this was the lowest point in her life to have gone so far to escape so many evil people. In the dark, lost and cold, she lost hope for everything.
She fell down in the dark and just felt like not getting up. Freezing to death was a better option than going forward. And when you think nobody cares for you, you can feel like there's no reason to live.
But she did get back up and continued to crawl under barbed wire in the dark and made it into Mongolia. And from there, she was sent to South Korea where she was able to connect with human rights groups and they were able to help her.
And while this is the most harrowing story I've ever read, there's something about this decision of risking your life to escape from North Korea that captivates me. Because in North Korea, they brainwash you into believing that the Supreme Leader and the country are the best in the world and more important than anything.
And you should put all your wants and desires aside to help the Supreme Leader. So it's not just about escaping from a country. But first, you have to undo that mindset that's been forced into you since you were born. And to take that leap of faith that even though you have no idea what the world is like on the other side of that border, you just hope that it's a better life than what's in North Korea.
Yungmi Park took that leap of faith and made it to the other side. And that's the mystery I want to figure out. What does it take for people to escape tyranny and seek freedom? But to figure this out, I'm gonna need some help. My name is Yungmi Park and I was born in Hassan, North Korea. These are true stories from the dark side of the internet.
I'm Jack Recider. This is Dark Knight Diaries.
Okay, yeah, we're going to go deep into North Korea on this episode. But to talk about the mindset on why people defect doesn't sound like a tech hacker story, does it? Yeah, well, true. I promise there is tech involved in this story. And it's actually tech that you have laying around your home that can help people in North Korea. And we'll get to that, I promise. Just have a little patience at first. You might also think, how is North Korea related to stories about the dark parts of the internet?
Well, it's a dark place. I mean, literally it is the darkest place on Earth. If you see the cool satellite photos, it is like literally the black horror of the universe. I mean, this is our Earth, Alice. Yeah, I just like whenever I think about North Korea, I do not see, I don't remember any color. Just everything seems to me gray.
I first want to understand what life is like in North Korea, and that's why I have Yeonmi here. She was born in the town of Haysan in North Korea in 1993, which makes her 27 now. Now, Haysan is in the northern part of North Korea. In fact, it's right on the border of China. The only thing separating Haysan North Korea and China is the Yalu River. As Yeonmi grew up, she would play in the river.
Yeah, I was playing at the river bank and seeing China and seeing the kids from Chinese side who, you know, who seemed to really were fed. You could see the kids on the Chinese side? Yeah, it's really not a river. So you can't even hear what they're saying. They ask you questions like, you know, are you hungry? And they all knew that you're hungry.
Yeah, did you tell me more more about this river? Did you like wash your clothes in there? Did you bathe in there? Yeah, so you know in North Korea that we were you know like we don't leave your bottom class I guess.
So, you know, we didn't have, you know, laundry machines or shower, anything like that. All we could do was going to the river, you know, wash our hair and body there and wash our clothes and also get the water from the river to home to drink and cook. So, it was the main source for us to do anything that they were living.
But it's the north part, which is cold in the winter. Did you also do that in the winter? Yeah, in the winter, we definitely couldn't even go sour. I mean, we could go back there. But in the winter, I still had to go to Russia.
close and get water. So it is freezing that somebody digs a hole in the frozen, like, yellow river. And in that hole, actually, a lot of times, children follow adults fall in the sky and get ground.
And it's really risky thing to do, but what can you do? It's a lie. I mean, every day is like life and death situation. You're not bothered by that kind of danger. And because you need water to survive, there's no like your water comes in the house. You have to go somewhere, get the water. And you still have to wash your clothes.
So I remember, like, in the wintertime, you know, you might just go, like, not taking baths for a month. Why doesn't your city have running water and running electricity? It's also the regime. I mean, only chose the city of Pyongyang, the Qatar and the rest of the country. They considered, you know, not as rural as those people in Pyongyang.
And North Korean government regime knows that if we are fed or if we are comfortable, that's even nature we're going to think about what's the meaning of life, what is happening in the world. But when you're so desperate, when you're like a verge of death,
When you are starving, you do not have time to think about the meaning of life. You do not have time to think about why the political system is working or not. They were with a complete control. And the regime uses the starvation as a tool to control the population. So they choose not to make us feel comfortable. They choose not to make us fearful.
So that is just exactly why most people don't have it. The regime has enough resources to feed these people and get all those facilities, but they choose not to in order to control us. I think it's important to understand why there's no food, water or electricity in Yunmi's town. So we'll do a quick five-minute North Korean history lesson.
A hundred years ago, Japan had taken over the whole Korean peninsula. Then in the 1940s, World War II happened. In Japan, bomb the US naval base Pearl Harbor. The US didn't like this, so the bomb Japan backed. But the US had bigger bombs. A nuclear bomb was detonated in Japan. But Japan didn't surrender.
So a second nuclear bomb was detonated in Japan. And with that, in 1945, Japan surrendered. Now, when they surrendered, there was both US troops and Soviet troops in the Korean Peninsula, and neither wanted to leave. So they both agreed, let's just split Korea right down the middle and establish its own countries on both sides.
Sort of like how Germany got split into East and West Germany, Korea got split into North and South Korea. U.S. established the Republic of Korea for the South, where Seoul would be the capital, and the Soviets in the North. In 1948, they established the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, DPRK.
But I don't believe it's democratic or republic, despite the name, it's been rated the least democratic country on earth. One of the first things the Soviets needed to do was establish a new leader. They held so-called elections, but it's widely believed those votes didn't count, and the Soviets just placed Kim Il-sung as the first leader of North Korea. Kim Il-sung developed an ideology called Juche, which was focused on the principles of national independence and self-reliance.
The whole idea was that North Korea wouldn't need to rely on any other governments or global powers in order for a nation to thrive. This idea was taken to the extreme. The leader was soon calling himself the Supreme Leader, and was convincing everyone that he personally was feeding and giving clothes to the people of North Korea, and he would also say that he personally liberated North Korea from its oppressors by fighting in the wars.
And he would make the teachers' teachers in school. And after decades of it being taught, it was instilled. Because if you didn't believe it, you were taken away, tortured, or beaten, or brought down in social rank. See, North Korea has this very harsh caste system.
Those that show great loyalty to the country or leader will be given a higher class compared to those who don't. So anyone who fought in the war against Japan was in the highest class. And those who were farmers or even lawyers were the lowest class. The people of the higher classes get better things. They get to live closer to the supreme leader and they get things like food, electricity, and water. People in the lower class, they don't get that.
Now, the North Koreans relied heavily on aid from the Soviet Union, which was still their biggest ally and sent them food, electricity, and supplies. So when the Soviet Union broke apart in the early 1990s, it had an immediate impact on North Korea. They lost their biggest ally. No more food or aid was sent. This resulted in a sharp loss for North Korea, who had been getting a lot of resources from the Soviet Union.
The North Korean economy almost completely collapsed. They tried to get help from China, but China couldn't keep up with all the help that was requested. So North Korea simply went without. It could not provide enough water, food, and supplies for the nation.
But besides that, in the same decade, the 1990s, a great famine came over North Korea. The country could not grow enough food for its own people. And since everything is government controlled, the caste system went into even stronger effect. Only the people who were the most loyal could eat. The least loyal would starve to death.
This was an extremely cruel way to control the minds of the people and get them to be even more obedient than ever. Which often meant turning in your friends or family if you saw them doing things against the rules, they might get tortured, just so you could eat a little that day, and show more loyalty.
The combination of the Soviet Union breaking apart and not sending aid in this famine and the strict government regime meant that hundreds of thousands of people were dying. Maybe as much as 3 million North Koreans died in the 1990s.
In 1994, Kim Il-sung died of a heart attack. His son immediately took over Kim Jong-il. He was ruthless and cruel too. Punishing people even more harshly if they broke even the smallest laws. Make a phone call outside the country? Yeah, you might be put to death for that.
Kim Jong-il died in 2011, and immediately his son took over Kim Jong-un, who still rules today. So in the short span since North Korea was created in 1948, there have been only three leaders, all of which are from the same family, all of whom ruled as dictators.
They all tried to rule without relying on imports from other nations, and they have stood by their ideology with pride. But it's gone so far now. It's practically a cult. Your obedience to the leader is tested on a daily basis. You can't leave the country. It's strictly forbidden. You must worship the Supreme Leader, Kim Jong-un, and do everything he tells you to. There's no justice. There's no
No human rights, there's no dignity in any sense. For humans to exist there, there's only king, the dictator. The country exists for the dictator. People live for the dictator.
Worshipping the dictator is woven into every aspect of life there. His picture is hung in every house in school, and everyone has meetings every week to discuss how you've worshipped the dictator and how you can do better next week. Then you critique each other in the meetings too, telling them how they can do better at worshipping him. In North Korea, you and your opinions, wants, desires, dreams, they don't matter. Only the leader does.
in North Korea, nobody asked me what I thought, like what I want or what I like, what I dislike. It was not even a concept, as a concept for people to ask each other. So when someone, I thought like in North Korea, obviously not the favorite color for us to like, they really like, they are not such a word they exist in North Korea. We don't say I, right? Every time we start from Earth, same we say we.
and say that we love red because it's a revolutionary color. Can you imagine going your whole life and nobody asked you what your favorite color was? Or actually, you weren't even allowed to have a favorite color. It simply must be red because that's what the Supreme Leader wants you to have as a favorite color.
Or let me put it to you like this. We typically have many meanings for the word love. You can love your spouse or partner, okay? But you can also love a friend, or you can love playing a game, or you might love some music, or you might have love for humankind and just want to help those in need, or you might actually love yourself either in a narcissistic way or in a more healthy way.
But in North Korea, none of that exists. We do not experience any of this. The only love you're allowed to experience is love for the Supreme Leader. It's madness. Can you imagine not knowing what love is? Except for the one person who told you that you have to love them?
Now, even though the country tries to be independent, it's not. It relies heavily on imports to keep its people alive. We're not talking about luxury goods here. We're just talking about basic food and clothes and supplies. In fact, Yunmi's father had a job handling these imports.
He was a civil servant doing work for the government. But see, in North Korea, it's extremely hard to get by with whatever you make at your job. It's just not enough. It's barely enough to get by just yourself, much less to try to support a family. And this is common in most of North Korea. People have to find extra work to survive. And often people find something illegal to do to survive.
and you don't have enough resources to survive, so importing illegal goods becomes a necessity to live. Especially when just a narrow river is what separates your country from China. You can set up some agreement to toss things back and forth or swim across, go into town, buy something, swim back.
So because her father was working with imports, he found a way to trade metals with people in China, copper, nickel, silver. He was doing this illegally, which helped him earn just enough to keep his family alive. Barely enough food, but still no water or electricity in their house. In Yunmi's house was her, her sister, her mom and dad. One day her dad got caught trading these metals to China. And that's why he got him in trouble and he sent to a labor camp for that.
Because her dad was trading medals with China to earn just a little extra to live, he was sentenced to 17 years in prison. And this made life much harder for a young me who was only nine. Now around this time, young me, her friend, who she knew, and her friend's mom would sometimes get ahold of illegal movies that were snuck into North Korea.
Yeah, so she saw a lot of Hollywood and South Korean and other like foreign movies. And also she lent it to other people. So she kind of distributed the foreign information. And she was publicly executed for doing that. What executed for watching a movie? That's insane.
But that's what North Korea believes they have to do to keep their people obedient.
Well, that's another reason why North Korea is a dark place. Not only is there no imports of foreign films or music, but there's no internet. People of North Korea cannot access the internet, no emails, YouTube, no podcasts, no news. There's one TV channel. One. Guess what's on it? Pro North Korean propaganda.
And everyone's given a radio, and the only radio station that the radio works on is a pro-North Korean propaganda radio station. And I think you actually have to listen to it on certain days to hear what the Supreme Leader is doing. Was there any sort of computers in school for you? No. I never even heard the word like...
even internet or I never seen a computer in my life in earth. I don't think everyone maybe heard the word like slightly somewhere but never seen it. It was not even anyone's part of the life. Now of course in a town that has almost no electricity this makes sense. Of course she wouldn't ever see a computer but in the big city of Pyongyang they do have computers but it's still very rare. The people who are in the elite
a class in Pyongyang, they do have intranet that the regime created to distribute like a lot of propaganda, like the materials. Yeah, so it's an intranet, not internally, right? Yeah, not the, they can ask us like Google and Facebook, they have intranet that is like really strictly controlled by the government. Okay. And some schools might have that and some libraries.
Oh, I'm sure in Pyongyang they do, but I never seen anything in my eyes. So I don't know exactly where they have, but the people from like a late class told me they didn't use the intranet.
Now, you might wonder what kind of computers they have in North Korea. Like, are they Windows machines, Macs? They actually have their own operating system that they've made themselves called Red Star OS. Red Star being the symbol of their country. And this is actually a modified Linux system, but it's severely restricted. It has Firefox on it, but they renamed it. And it's called My Country instead. And when you open it, you can only go to a handful of state-sponsored North Korean websites.
It's been reported that whatever you do on a North Korean computer gets screenshotted and saved so the police can check and monitor your usage history and it even restricts what files can be opened on it. And I think what bothers me the most about North Korea is this full control over the information that the people are allowed to consume.
There's literally no way to research anything or fact check it outside the information that's given to them by their government. This ability to control what information the citizens know is what keeps them obedient. They literally don't know what the rest of the world is like or that they're being treated extremely poorly. They are told over and over since they were born that the rest of the world is terrible and they are being treated with love and great care. So they believe it. It's all they know.
Now when Yang Mi was young, living in North Korea, her uncle got a copy of the movie Titanic, the one with Leonardo DiCaprio. And she got a chance to watch it. It was dubbed in Korean, so she could understand it. And she knew this was dangerous, and she might get in trouble if she was caught. But she watched it anyway.
It was a revolutionary thing as a young girl to watch because I never seen anything like that. In North Korea, there's no Romeo and Juliet. We do not read about Shakespeare. We do not have love songs and love books. And watching a movie is made for a love story, which I learned in North Korea. I thought it was a shame for things to love somebody. There's no even vocabulary in North Korea.
we have for love. We only allowed to use the word love when we describe our feelings towards the dear leader and the party. I never heard like my mom or my father says to each other like they love each other or they love me even. So seeing that movie, you know, a man dies for a woman, like it was a revolutionary thing and it didn't give me a discica turning moment to where I thought
You know, something might be different exist in the world and maybe the outside world might not be that bad. Because in North Korea, it's like, you know, Georgia was 1984. They say their enemy is trying to attack us constantly. And we have our dear, like, leader to protecting us from these monsters and coming to kill us and torture us, you know?
so they they pictures how to hate our enemies since our birth and how to be grateful for your leader to protect us so seeing that movie is like all I thought like all Americans were like bastards and monsters it didn't seem like that in the movie so yeah that definitely gave me some taste of freedom and humanity I think
And what a strange way to first understand that concept of humanity by watching Titanic. But yet it was so powerful at the same time to secretly peer into another culture that you aren't supposed to see and be struck by a completely new concept such as love.
And remember, she somehow watched this even though she didn't have electricity. And while the town had electricity and her house was wired to the grid, the thing is, is that the town just never turned on the electricity for the people living there. No, we didn't. I mean, we didn't have electricity sometimes, like the government gives electricity on the days like a daily birthday or like New Year's Day.
So those days they want to give us electricity so we can watch those, like, propagate the materials. Some other time, like, summer time, you know, if the water may be surprised good, they give, like, electric ones in a few months. So, you know, you definitely get a few times a year. So, you know, sometimes in order to finish your movie, like, movie Titanic, such a long movie, it can take months to finish your movie.
I do remember really, like, whenever the electricity came, like, it was the happiest event in my life. Like, we were just clapping. Everyone was, you know, going, like, parade, and, like, everyone, like, whole, like, town, like, claps. That's how happy we were, how much that made us happy.
Now the North Korean borders are locked up pretty tight. There are military guards all along the borders, making sure nobody is sneaking out, nothing is getting snuck in. There are still ways to get stuff through, and one way to learn how to do that was to look at Germany. See, there's actually a few surprising similarities between North Korea and Germany. At the end of World War II, both countries were split apart, with half being Soviet-occupied in both Germany and North Korea.
There was East and West Germany, with the iconic Berlin Wall, keeping people from coming in and out. Well, the Germans wanted to send propaganda over the wall to the other side, so they would tie messages to balloons and float them over. In fact, that's what this song is all about, sending propaganda using balloons over the border.
There's something here from somewhere else The wall machine springs to life Opens up one eager eye, focusing in on the sky
Red alerts or machines bring to life focusing on the sky? What a strange world that we live in where military is instructed to shoot balloons and fear that information might come into the country that you don't want your people to have. Not false information, not lies, just little bits of truth.
The Koreans began sending balloons to. Both sides would send propaganda over to the other side. When the wind was right, North Korea would send balloons into South Korea, with messages and South Korea would send balloons in a North Korea with messages. And yes, military was instructed to shoot balloons that would float over. Eventually, a treaty was signed where South Korea would agree to stop sending balloons, if they could have a meeting with the president of North Korea. And this happened, so South Korea stopped sending them.
But the balloons were effective. They were working. They were getting past the guns and into the hands of the people. And they were reading it. This was slowly opening their eyes. So human rights groups saw how effective this was and began floating their own balloons in the North Korea. It just wasn't state sponsored anymore. Human rights groups were sending information in like sports scores, news, pictures of sexy women, doing anything they could to entice the North Koreans to escape.
But this had a limited effect. I mean, how much information can you put on a leaflet? So next, we have the radio. In North Korea, there's one radio station, and your radio is permanently set to that station. You have to know how to hack the thing in order to pick up other stations. And there are human rights groups broadcasting radio waves into North Korea, but of course, being caught with a hacked radio would result in a big punishment.
prison, torture, maybe execution. So here we are with this major problem of trying to figure out how to get information into the darkest network on Earth. How do we do this? After the break, we'll talk with somebody who is doing it.
There are people who are smuggling information into North Korea and these people really fascinate me and it might fascinate you too. So I want you to meet Alex. My name is Alex Gladstein. I'm the Chief Strategy Officer for the Human Rights Foundation. We're a nonprofit based in New York City with a global focus and we help people who live under authoritarian governments. Alex joined the Human Rights Foundation in 2007 and started as an intern. And that summer my job was to put together
backpacks of information which would be taken by my Latin American colleagues and smuggled into Cuba to the Underground Library movement. So in Cuba, you can't have a book or a movie legally speaking without it being approved by the Communist Party. So of course, like the amount and variety of information that people can access legally, officially, is quite limited and obviously very propaganda.
driven. So, you know, we sent in all kinds of movies dubbed into Spanish, e-books, you know, everything from animal farm to beef or vendetta. And people would like read and watch these things in their homes and create small discussion groups. And this was like a program we ran for several years. It was really successful. And that gave us the confidence and expertise, I would say, to be able to say, hey, putting information into the hands of people who have under
and information monopolies actually really important for a whole bunch of reasons. Why don't we try to help the people in North Korea? See, here's the way I look at it. IT stands for information technology. The entire point of IT is to find an effective way of exchanging information between two people or places or machines or whatever. And hacking typically involves stealing information we're not supposed to have. But here in North Korea, we have an anomaly, a problem even.
We're here in the year 2020 now. How can we use technology effectively to get information into North Korea? This is an IT problem like no other. And if we could somehow inject information into the country, what would be the perfect elixir of truth that would be the most impactful to the people there to get them to either leave or overthrow their regime?
Last decade, they were seeing DVDs getting smuggled into North Korea with all kinds of foreign movies and shows on them. This was eye-opening to a lot of North Koreans, educating them and teaching them about all the different cultures of the world, which opened their eyes to realize their own country might not be so good. But the government caught on to this and came up with a solution. The thing with CDs and DVDs is, I mean, they were great for a long time, but the problem is now, so what the government will do sometimes is come in just such
and they'll look at what was in your community player. Yeah, so that's one of the tactics that the government used. So they really do want to control what we think, right? And people still go risk their life to watch this for information. And China is the good source. A lot of smugglers go to China and bring this like DVDs to, you know, that contain the foreign information, the foreign movies.
And when people watch this, the government really tries to be tricky. They give the electricity out of nowhere. And then suddenly they shut it down. And when that happens, you cannot really get the DVD out of the player. And this police would get these people and punish them and send them to camp or sometimes even execution.
You say, if you get caught with a DVD from another country, you might get executed for that? So the thing is, the dictatorship is that they are not consistent.
They sometimes execute someone like for eating cow. Like my mom saw this young man got executed because he stole a cow from the farm, the their union and he had TV. So he ate the cow and that was his crime that he was executed. So like the human life is less valid than even cow in North Korea.
And sometimes not. So the government is not always executing people for watching a phone information. But they want to make a showcase when they want to spread the fear. They want to show people this is what you're going to be. This is what you're going to get if you watch phone information. So they do like these showcases and then execute people. But I did also hear people that who wasn't executed for watching DVDs and just sent a prison camp.
So yeah technically you can definitely get executed for watching something or like you know bands, information that government don't want you to like watch.
So it sounds like CDs and DVDs aren't a good solution here. So what people have been doing is putting information on USB flash drives and sometimes SD cards because you can easily take them out and hide them if the power is shut off to your house and you can put a lot more information on them compared to DVDs too. The other thing is that I mean it sounds horrifying but like
In a pinch, you can swallow it, right? You just eat it. I can't really do that with the DVD. This is what defectors have told me. So SD cards are really interesting because they're really super tiny, right? So obviously, super easy to conceal. The smaller we can make storage technology.
The easier it'll be to get information into dictatorships, and the harder it will be for authoritarians to control and have information monopoly. So Alex developed a plan to sneak USB drives into North Korea, and they called the project Flash Drives for Freedom. That's what we assessed with the Flash Drives for Freedom Initiative is that, hey, there needs to be a way to get everybody in the world involved with getting information into North Korea. So let's come up with an idea.
one of my colleagues, Jim Warnock, came up with the name Blast drives for Freedom. And some guys at Leo Burnett, the really prominent ad company, decided to volunteer to create that imagery that you've seen, which is like the Kim Jong Un face with the blue background with the USB mouth. And we debuted it South by Southwest 2016. And we've raised enough support to be able to send in at this point, more than 70,000 Blast drives in North Korea. And if you just think about that for a second, there's about
25 million people in North Korea and 70,000 USB sticks. I mean each one gets shared a lot. Remember these are very valuable. So not only is each movie watched by like a small group but like once you're done with
when you think about other effects. And with more support from people, we can make a much bigger difference. This is the strangest way to hack I've ever seen. Picture the whole country of North Korea like a super secure network. Nothing gets in or out of there. And your goal is to get data into the network. And not to poison it or corrupt it. But no, it's just to correct the data that's in there. The data inside North Korea is poison. The antidote is on the USB drives. So how do you hack this network to get the data in?
Well, I guess it would start with, I don't know, maybe a school in Wisconsin hears about the drive they've read about in the media. So they do a little collection at lunchtime and they mail us six flash drives. So they go to our collection point in Palo Alto. Normally, usually the flash drives we receive are new at third.
not new. We work with security experts to wipe them in as complete ways we can. At that point, they're packaged up and shipped to South Korea to our partners. There are several organizations there, as I mentioned, that are led by North Koreans.
focus on getting this stuff into South Korea. So at that point, the drives will arrive at their offices and they've been running these focus groups, okay? So in previous weeks, up until this day that we're talking about, they've been sitting down recent people who've arrived to South Korea from North Korea and interviewing them about what kind of content is hot right now or what's like interesting right now. And they've also been
and see how it rates, right? So it's sort of like with TV in the United States, but we're trying to get the most effective content possible. So once a batch is determined, once a particular mix of
perhaps interviews with defectors, dramas, soap operas, movies, maybe some outside clippings of news. Some of them are like have the gospels, you know, like they have the Bible verses. Some of them have, you know, the American TV show friends or the, you know, the housewives, the reality shows or, you know, the fashion shows or like sitcom or like, you know, thriller. Once a particular
elixir of truth is mixed and put on to the drives. They have these little machines where you can basically upload, it looks like a surge protector, but you can basically do like 20 drives at a time. They are packaged up and flown into China. How many are packaged up on this mission? How many would go at once? Yeah, so it's pretty slow just because of how
delicate the processes, but I mean you're usually talking a couple hundred at a time. To do more at scale, which we've done has just required a lot of creativity, which I won't go into all the details obviously, but let's just say you fly into one of the cities in China that's close to North Korea and you head towards the border.
Now, there's a few different ways to get things into North Korea. Like for instance, there are people like Yunmi's father who would import foods and items into the country. He had to go into China to get the stuff and bring it back. After all, he was a civil servant and had permission to do this. See, China and North Korea border each other. And often there's a small town on the Chinese side of the border. So he'd go across the border into the Chinese town as part of his job. In these Chinese towns, there are like markets. So there are people
Chinese people who are selling everything from solar panels to clothing to food and North Koreans come in and buy them and then bring them into North Korea. So it's like there are these bridges. Yeah, there's lots of like truck and car activity or even just pedestrian activity. And in the winter, the whole thing freezes over so they can just walk across.
So yeah, why not just give people at these Chinese markets a ton of these USB drives for free and then see if they can help get them into North Korea somehow? And sure, the Chinese shop owners will probably charge for it, but at least it's available to buy if somebody's looking around for these things. People often say that a USB stick of movies or news articles or something is like basically like gold North Korea.
so people will risk a lot to get it. Yeah, if you know a certain Chinese market might have some people of North Korea will find a way to get to that market and get them. Instead of even sending in pre-recorded flash drives, sometimes people will send in a giant terabyte drive that's packed with content and then a whole bunch of empty ones, so that the person can kind of act
illegal drugs in a country in a democracy.
instead of paying for weed or something, you're paying for a flash drive with outside contents on it. You bring that home, you watch it with your family, and then maybe you share it. So it's kind of like the whole life cycle here. Okay, that's one way to do it. And there's certainly a high level of risk here too. But again, being able to have these small USB drives means you can conceal it pretty well and get it across the border.
But there's another way to do it. Alex works with people to actually smuggle the drives into North Korea themselves, which has to be quite the adventure and super secretive. So I'm not going to go into the actual details of this, because that would be really dangerous. But generally speaking, there are trust networks. So when you defect from North Korea, you're paying someone to take you physically out of North Korea across the
track to freedom. Now sometimes they are being malicious and 70% of all people who leave North Korea are women and a lot of them, like by some accounts nearly all of them get sucked into some sort of trafficking ring. But some of the people, obviously the folks who eventually make it out, found some sort of human network
from. Now when you get out and you come just out free and you're now free person and you're thinking about what to do, you still can contact that person or those people.
So these networks of people who go back and forth are known to North Korean defectors. And each North Korean defector has a unique escape route that they took. So there's like thousands and thousands and thousands of these human networks that help people get North Korean into China and eventually into freedom or into subjugation, depending on what happens. But each of these like, and whether it's on a boat or across a frozen river or
under the eyes of a bribed official at a military tower. There's many, many different ways to escape and every way of escape is also a way of sending something in, if that makes sense.
Again, I can't overstate this enough that this is so extremely risky. If you get caught in North Korea doing this, it's really bad news for you. North Korea has a lot of concentration camps. So the worst case scenario is if you get caught, you might go to one of these concentration camps and never come back.
But those who do make it back have horrifying stories, stories of being tortured to heinous degrees. And I don't even want to explain what I've heard because it's just stuff that you'll never forget and it's sickening. But even knowing that you might get caught and tortured, people still try to smuggle these USB drives over the border. But sometimes even when you get caught, there are ways out of it. When it comes to the government there, they would like to say they're the most pure whatever
And especially the soldiers who are sitting out there right now, I mean, so we're filming this podcast in December. So it's like a Siberian winter, literally. Russia's border is right there as well. And we're talking one of the most brutal winter climates in the world. So you're sitting out there in the freezing
or whatever, and you're just kind of assigned to watch this river border. Yeah, if you encounter somebody and you're the only one there in this massive porous region, and you find someone who's trying to escape, if they're like, what if I give you all of these cigarettes or whatever, will you let me go? You're probably going to say yes. There's a lot of bribing that happens.
And a lot of these officials end up getting sucked into these information rings. These are just a few ways to get drives into North Korea. I'm sure there's been experiences with people floating packages like down the river or balloons over or even flying drones and then dropping some and then flying them back real quick. And once these flash drives get into North Korea, it becomes part of their gray market. It sounds more like a black market to me, but Alex says it's a gray market. Yeah, I say gray market.
provide for the people. The average annual income is way higher than the national wage, right? So everybody's doing a little something on the side, some sort of arbitrage, some sort of buying and selling all throughout North Korea. And a lot of that stuff that they're moving around and buying and selling came from China. So again, it's just like this massive influx of outside stuff. When someone gets caught, I mean,
a large percentage of those people are able to bribe their way out of it. The people who are not able to bribe their way out of it, several different things could happen. I've spoken to people who've been basically put in prison for a couple weeks as a lesson, maybe tortured, but not killed or put in a prison camp.
Then, of course, there are people who are put into a prison camp or, you know, counter-revolutionary activities. This absolutely happens. You said not just one person, but maybe the family too. Yeah, I mean, depending on what kind of example they want to make out of you, right? So it's always about human context. So if you're in like a particular city or town in North Korea and you're a emblematic person who represents like
you know, who's a prominent person in that area and you're caught.
You know, they may want to make an example out of you, right? So they may make a big deal of it and then round up your whole family and take you away. You may never see them again, right? So how, um, how, how, I don't know, bloodthirsty is the government to try to find these things. Cause you said earlier, they make shut off the power to try to find CDs and drives. Are they, are they very hard? I mean, because their entire architecture of power relies on having an information monopoly. If a certain percentage of the North Korean people,
But they're told that they're the luckiest people in the world and everything else is like a dumpster fire is not true. Things will change very quickly. So it's just a matter of time. I mean, right now, I mean, no one really knows, but certainly less than half of North Koreans actually know, like, have a good grasp of what the outside world is like. It's probably closer to less than a third, maybe even less than a quarter. No one really knows.
to escape, which is like a tiny little fraction of the actual population. But let's say it's like for the purposes of this hypothetical that one out of every three North Koreans today realizes that everything they've been told is a lie. They're in the minority. Once that number becomes north of 50 or even gets to 70, 80%, there's no way that the government can
So, you know, every program has to have a goal, right? So, what is our goal? I think from everything we've been told, the idea that there's going to be some sort of grassroots revolution is just not going to happen in North Korea. The monopoly of power and violence is too stacked on the government's side. However, what could very well happen is some sort of coup at the top where the middle of
enough of this and they get rid of this theocratic kim dynasty and they take power for themselves and you have a military dictatorship in North Korea now no longer a theocratic sort of dynasty but you have a military
of these guys, but they call them a reformer. So he's the one who used to deal with the Chinese. Now, of course, Kim Jong-un saw this as a threat and killed him within weeks of taking power, right? One of the first things he did as a signal to everybody else that we're going to get rid of all the reformers. But if the Kim family
or actually having a constructive dialogue with the North Korean government where it's like, oh, well, if you guys close five prison camps, we'll let you compete in the Olympics or something. This would actually open the door to this. If you disassemble five tactical weapons, then we'll get rid of this particular sanction scheme. You could actually start having this discussion.
And as a first step towards a free North Korea, which would be, of course, part of the whole peninsula would be a free country. It would be one Korea. So that's, of course, the ultimate vision here.
It's so amazing to me to think that if enough people in North Korea had the right elixir of truth, it would result in a country flipping over. You might think that by watching Titanic, you won't suddenly start protesting. That's true, it's probably not enough. But at the same time, you might wake up to your father being hauled off to a prison camp simply for making a phone call, or you just might be starving to death or freezing to death.
And if you push someone into a corner with no way out, they'll do something completely unexpected just to survive. And the people of North Korea are pushed into a corner every day, so sometimes just a little drop of truth is all that it takes for them to break out of their thought-controlled mind and realize that the dictator has purposely been starving people to death just to keep them in order. And for what? Just to maintain his power?
There's a formula somewhere in here that as the lack of humanity goes lower, knowledge of the outside world gets higher. But someplace, it'll be a tipping point for North Korea. Definitely, I mean there, that's the only thing I think is gonna... It's a really long-term investment, right? North Korean regime has been there for more than 70 years. In 30 more years, there are 1 cent trees in this way. They've been doing just like...
brainwashing so many years on people's minds. They've been like good, you know. And only deep brainwashing these people is a truth. And this USV contains truth in it. And you have information about freedom and human rights and all about this world. So I think even though we might not see revolution right now,
but it like it accumulates and it gradually shift people's mindset and that turning point can happen anytime. I think the only change in North Korea should happen is that when people demand the change in North Korea, it's not by like military invasion, not by anything. It should be that
that knows Korean people demand their rights and their freedom. And to do that, we need to show this information through the drive, flash drives we have. But what I'm worried about is that people can be tortured or put to the camp or executed for having these drives. Are we putting them in danger?
But without even doing that, they get stuck to death for no reason. They get sent to prison for so many other things. So, you know, what is the alternative? It's like being a slave and being cut for so many other things.
And so I think that's like, yeah, it is true that, but when we send those like drives, it's not like we forced them to watch. We are not like approaching these people, like you must watch this information. We just give them the option to choose and they always have the option to not watch them. But like myself and like my parents, we took that risk and we watched Titanic and we learned about the world and we came out.
So if we like forcefully showing them these things without the favor, that might be not fair. But because we just given the option to choose to learn about the truth, I think we are only doing their favor. And even though we do even this, actually, people already demand in truth, without this flash drives a project. They buy this information in the black market.
They pay their money, even in their poverty. These people are so hungry for truth. So even we only giving getting more flash drives gonna bring down the cost. So much like an excessive surprise now, you know, bring down the cost and people gonna easily access information without too much money they are paying for it at the moment.
Yanmi's mother had to leave her two daughters home alone in the winter. Yanmi was nine and her sister was 11. To survive, they would have to go to the mountains and pick grass and flowers to eat. And this was probably the most horrible winter she ever experienced in her life. No heat in the house, no food, no water other than the frozen Yalu River, no electricity. Somehow she got through it. Yanmi's father developed cancer while in prison. So he bribed someone to go home so he can be treated.
But even though the family was together, it was still a massive struggle to survive. There's still no food. Out of pure necessity, she needed to find a way to survive. My case was like, I didn't escape to see. I was very hungry. And if I stayed there, I was just gonna die. My only motivation was starvation. I wanted to find something to eat. And that was
You know, going where the lights were. Like I was in the border part of North Korea, Hae San. And as you said, right across the river, there's China. There are highways, there are cars running on the highways. They have these, like, street lights, and they have lights at night. And as a child, I thought, looking at China, oh, if I go where the lights are, maybe I will find something to eat. And that's how I escaped.
And her mother paid someone to smuggle them into China, leaving her father behind. Now, keep in mind, if the Chinese police had caught them, they would have sent them back to North Korea, which would have put them right into a prison camp. Because China is a communist country with some sort of allegiance to North Korea. If you get caught as a North Korean in China, they send you back. It's called repatriation. So it's a horrible practice that it's honestly
a million Muslims in prison camps right now. But when you're sending someone back to North Korea, they're facing either execution, of course, without trial, or with a mock trial, or more likely imprisonment in a gulag, where they're going to starve to death or something.
As you heard, Yunmi narrowly escaped and made it to South Korea. And when she got there, she started attending a school. And one day the teacher asked her what her favorite color was. This was the first time ever anyone asked her this. And she was 14 years old. I didn't understand the question because in North Korea, nobody asked me what I thought, like what I want or what I like, what I dislike.
It was not even a concept as a concept for people to ask each other. She didn't know she was allowed to have a favorite color. So it took her a while to figure things out and to discover her own self. So what is her favorite color? It's just spring green.
spring green. Good choice. While in Korea, she learned English by watching the TV show, Friends. I actually literally learned my English through watching Friends. I like watched it 30 times from season one to 10. So, it was insane.
my like obsession with friends but I think first time when I saw the show it was like it wasn't funny because I know the humor is like something that you need to understand the culture and you get it so it took many many many times for me to get the jokes and finally enjoy the show
She was able to slowly establish herself in the world and feels incredibly happy to have escaped. And actually she's living in the U.S. now. And she just finished getting her degree at a university and is becoming a human rights advocate and helping others. It's like, you know, happy. Like, I keep it like a billion, like a trillion, trillion times happier than when I was in North Korea because now I enter home and like you put the process to reach the light zone, right? I get this hot water. I mean,
But somehow it is. I think I'm happier definitely than North Korea, but it's not like that literally is that you appreciate when you really have nothing is I think very different. So how could the audience help North Korea?
I think the Euro audience are very into like technology and they are very mindful of this tool. I think one of the ways they can help is definitely getting more information into North Korea through flash drives. I think at the moment it is a really old world that we have.
The regime is so, you know, breathing these people with co-pregnant materials, but the flash drives the U.S. and the Internet of Korea contains truth about humanity, about the world, about freedom, and about the potential of North Korean people. So I think this is really an opportunity for all of us to get involved.
portion of the work and I do believe that North Korea will be free in our lifetime and we all can say that we do something to free these people when you are free.
Okay, so the flash drive for freedom project is an easy way to help people in North Korea. I mean, with a big enough campaign, we can see the regime get toppled by its own people. Let's all pitch in. Create a USB or SD card donation drive at your school or work, collect as many drives as you can, and send them to flash drives for freedom.
You have the power to make a change over in North Korea, and this is getting some serious momentum, so join me so we can help Alex help the people of North Korea. Oh, and one last thing while I have Yung Mi still, because I don't know if I'm ever going to have a chance to speak to a North Korean defector again, this has been so surreal to me. Especially tracking down a North Korean to get them on my show.
It's so crazy. What am I getting myself into? But okay. So even though she didn't see any computers while in North Korea, I still wanted to talk with her about what she knows about the computers there. It is also like I also meet a lot of defectors who were teaching in this, you know.
in universities where they are teaching hackers to hack and it's definitely that's one of the things the revenues that government gets from now is hacking the cyber hacking and attack they do on South Korea and so many other countries so see that's interesting already because I think first I was wondering who's who's able to do this because you know not many people have the computers so you're saying that there's some schools and Pyongyang that teach people how to hack
Yep, I definitely met a professor who taught the students to hack. And they do learn those things, but also I also heard a lot of them are based in China too. And they hack it not from North Korea, but they use this code and things they can, North Korea hackers can hack from third countries.
So because I have no internet there, it would be very hard to do it.
Why also maybe the connection might not be good but I'm not sure maybe these hackers do maybe good. I do think they do have internet for this certain very restricted officers. I'm sure Kim Jong-un has the internet and I know that these foreign journalists when they travel to North Korea they do get internet time to time.
And also, you know, this, when the people, when like tourists want to travel to North Korea, I heard the North Koreans like googling this in people names, see if they're like journalists or not. So I think those are very restrictive like population do have like internet access to Google and like that.
And, you know, when other countries do hacking, they do it to steal, you know, they spy, they steal trade secrets. But you said that this is a source of the hacking that North Korea does is a source of revenue for the country.
One of the reasons they do this, this hacking is to create revenue for them. And also they show, they kill some of the holidays when I was living in South Korea. All these banks will get this bug attack from North Korea.
So, North Korea does not just only have a new corrupting to threat other countries, but they have a strong army of hackers to threat any entity. Now, we are just really controlled by all this like internet system. Even if our water supplies, electric supplies controlled by internet.
And North Korea is threatening. Basically, whole humanity, which is a hacker. Hacker groups, they keep, keep raising and keep developing. I don't know how far they can go with there, you know.
It's like a recklessness. I don't know if that's what they're going to do, but North Korea certainly does not respect an international law. They do not certain respect any human dignity. So if they fix it at once, or if he decides that it's good for his maintaining his regime, I do think they are capable of literally everything.
This sounds incredibly fascinating to me. So fascinating that I'm going to stick with the North Korean theme for the next two episodes. And we're going to dive into some huge hacking campaigns that they've done over the years. And there's some real do'sies they've done. So see you in the next episode. Bye.
A very big thank you to Yunmi Park. Your story is so inspiring. Thank you so much for sharing it with us. And she has a book out that talks about her life in North Korea and her escape. It's one of the most inspirational and gut-wrenching books I've ever read. Her book is called In Order to Live. I tear up just thinking about it. I'll have some affiliate links to the book in the show notes.
Also a very big thank you to Alex Gladstein from the Human Rights Foundation. I mean, he's the one who formed the flash drives for freedom, and he helps out North Koreans. He's making the world a little bit better every day. And I highly encourage all of my listeners to donate USB drives, SD cards, or to send them money. Your website is flash drives for freedom dot o-r-g. That's all spelled out one big long word. Flash drives for freedom dot o-r-g.
The show is made by me, The Dark Rabbit, Jack Recider. Original score and sound design this episode by Garrett Tiedemann. Editing helped this episode by the super user, Damien, and our theme music is by the backbeat, Breakmaster Cylinder. And even though a dumpster fire erupts somewhere in the world every time I say it, this is Darknet Diaries.