Flash Drives For Freedom

Authored by flashdrivesforfreedom.org and submitted by Dan_From_HR
image for Flash Drives For Freedom

Here’s the thing: flash drives aren’t an obsolete technology. They are vital conveyors of information for millions of people around the world--especially people living in North Korea.

In the world’s most closed society, flash drives are valuable tools of education and discovery. In a society without internet, with total government censorship, and with no independent media, North Koreans rely on these little pieces of plastic. Filled with films, books, and internet content, they are windows to the outside world.

Some North Koreans have escaped their country’s dictatorship and found freedom in South Korea. There, they have established civil society groups dedicated to sending information, culture, truth, and knowledge back to their families, friends, and neighbors.

Human Rights Foundation and Forum 280 are collecting flash drives to give to these North Korean, refugee-led organizations. Each year, these groups collectively smuggle fewer than 10,000 flash drives. They could send many more, but are limited by the fact that they have to purchase the drives on the internet at retail cost. By gifting them drives, Flash Drives for Freedom allows them to focus in 2016 on programs and future work rather than spend time and money on purchasing equipment.

TooShiftyForYou on November 2nd, 2017 at 16:11 UTC »

The link is worth clicking on just for that first scroll down graphic.

mrshatnertoyou on November 2nd, 2017 at 15:54 UTC »

I wouldn't want to be the person hired to smuggle these in. If you steal a poster from a hotel you get six years, can't imaging the punishment for this.

kunalc on November 2nd, 2017 at 15:25 UTC »

But where do they watch it? Does the average North Korean have a computer?