The world got a sneak peek at North Korea's secretive Internet service this week, which we now know includes a grand total of 28 websites. On Sept. 19, one of North Korea's top-level nameservers was incorrectly configured to reveal a list of websites under the .kp domain. "One of North Korea's top-level nameservers was accidentally configured to allow global [domain name system] zone transfers," the file description says. Many of the sites seem fairly commonplace by global Web standards: Air Koryo airline, Korean recipes, insurance company, elderly care fund, Pyongyang International Film Festival, Kim Il Sung University. In April, North Korea formally banned Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and South Korean websites, as well as gambling and porn services.
Source: Fox News September 21, 2016 18:00 UTC