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Here’s What Making Cell Phone Calls in North Korea Sounds Like

An American academic has recreated “a taste” of North Korean cell phone service, “without the trip to Pyongyang.”

North Korea is probably the most reclusive country in the world. It's notoriously difficult to gain entry to the so-called Hermit Kingdom, even for mere tourists. And even then it's hard to see what life inside the regime is really like. But now you can at least know what it feels like—and sounds like—to use a North Korean cell phone as a foreigner.

Will Scott, an American academic who teaches computer science in Pyongyang, North Korea's capital and largest city, got a local cell phone subscription in the fall of 2015. On Thursday, Scott recreated what the standard recorded messages for subscribers of KoryoLink, the state-sanctioned mobile provider, sound like in an interactive simulator of sorts he posted on his website.

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