South Korea’s New Law Mandates Installation Of Government-Approved Spyware On Teens’ Smartphones

‘Considering the extent of its (most web-related) censorship efforts, South Korea must consider itself fortunate to be next-door neighbors with North Korea. Any time another censorship effort arrives, all the government has to say is, “Hey, at least we’re not as bad as…” while pointing its index fingers in an upward/roughly northerly direction.

It blocks sites and web pages with gusto, subverting its own technological superiority by acting as a Puritanical parental figure. Not that it helps. Every time the government ropes off one area, citizens carve out another. Four years ago, it attempted to pass a law making government-approved computer security software installation mandatory, supposedly in hopes of heading up the enlistment of citizens’ computers into botnet armies.

Now, it’s telling parents they must install government-approved and crafted spyware on the smartphones of any children under the age of 19.’

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