One IP address for all of PUST

One of the revelations from a recent interview conducted by Reuters with Park Chan-mo, co-founder of the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology (PUST), is that the entire university connects to the Internet through a single IP address.

IP (Internet Protocol) addresses are the numeric addresses that computers use to route data traffic on the Internet. There are several billion addresses available but North Korea has 1,024 for the entire country — a product of its late arrival on the global computer network.

PUST’s single address doesn’t necessarily mean there is only one computer with Internet access.

Sharing addresses is commonplace worldwide. Most small offices and homes networks have a single address and a router manages the traffic flow between local computers and the Internet. However, universities typically have anywhere from several addresses to thousands of them.

At PUST it appears to mean a restriction on the amount of access available to students.

“We have only one IP address, so students can’t spend a long time for the internet. They only use it for their study,” said Park. — Reuters, August 6, 2012.

There are few details about the degree to which PUST students can access the Internet, but The Korea Times got some details from Park in March this year:

“The Internet at PUST has been implemented since the spring semester of 2011 for the faculty members but graduate students have been using it since the fall semester of 2011,” he told The Korea Times via email. “The students are allowed to use the Internet for their classwork and research.” — Korea Times, March 11, 2012.

Park went on to say the Internet connection would help the university achieve its goal of becoming a global university.

2 Comments on "One IP address for all of PUST"

  1. Niklas Karner | August 26, 2012 at 21:58 |

    It really seems like North Koreans never make any sense. Saying that only having one IP limits the time spent online makes no sense at all. There are lots of Cisco and Huawei devices in north korea (god alone knows where they got them from, right RU,CN,TH,JP?) and they also have a huge internal network, probably nationwide all in the 10.x IP range.

  2. I feel like this article is a celebration of North Korea and it’s educational facilities.

    Censorship and education are incompatible opposites. You Cant have both. History has showed us this.

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