Lots of chuds seething and coping in the comments section. 
Why? Pretend to be democratic? Get something from DPRK? Monitor everyone that takes an interest in it?
There are major segments of South Korea who want peace, cooperation, and even unity with the half of their country not occupied by the United States military. They have some sway over the ruling political party.
SocDems/Libs in SK have some weird agreement with the DPRK. Both sides (mostly SK) stops propaganda stuff against eachother for a while.
Similar stuff has happened in the past. In the cold war the USSR and USA exchanged propaganda magazines (“Soviet Life” and “Amerika”) with around 30-50,000 issues each at peak.
The DPRK/ROK have done some softening/tightening of cross-parallel restrictions every now and then depending on the global tension, so not surprising really.
These papers used to need explicit state approval, and even under the new rules you’ll only be able to access them in certain libraries. Not exactly gonna be a mass proletarian moment unfortunately.
Readers can be identified as undesirables, not committed enough to maximising value for the Chaebol who owns them.
Isn’t it illegal to say something good about the DPRK there? Are they going to imprison every person selling that newspaper?
The DPRK has fallen: they have become Trots.
Providing a good example to Worst Korea

As they should
What does this mean? South Koreans can now read the NK newspaper? Is that any big deal? Nothing currently stops US residents from reading Pravda, but Pravda doesn’t have much influence in the US either way.
The US banned RT so very few Americans actually know about Russia’s viewpoints about the war
think you mean UK

I just accessed rt.com and it works fine.
The common language between Korea and the Occupied Territories makes a pretty big difference.
Pravda is available in English, https://news-pravda.com/ fwiw. It actually looks kind of interesting.
I have it going into my RSS feed
LMFAO
I found a YouTube link in your post. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:













