North Korea has once again been broadcasting random numbers believed to be coded instructions to undercover spies.
At 1:15 AM South Korean time Friday, the overseas-directed Pyongyang Broadcasting Station announced it would broadcast the answer key to an electronic engineering quiz, allegedly for students enrolled in a distance learning course.
The anchor then recited a series of numbers, to the effect of "number four on page 26, number 48 on page 305" and so forth.
The numbers recited were identical to an earlier broadcast the station aired on November eleventh.
The practice had fallen dormant in recent years --- but this year, North Korea has transmitted 15 number broadcasts since June.
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_IK_detail.htm?No=123511
>North Korea Radio Broadcasts Cryptic Numbers, Likely To Be Coded Messages For Spies In South Korea, Report Says
http://www.ibtimes.com/north-korea-radio-broadcasts-cryptic-numbers-likely-be-coded-messages-spies-south-2451089
i dont speak chinese
132
>>87973
I understand, may glorious leader smile upon our efforts.
There have been stations broadcasting numbers like this for decades...
If you want to listen to some old Cold War era recordings:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIH7cG3YmIo
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conet_Project
Presumably, these are to communicate with spies, but no real way to tell.
>>87789
It looks like it says "SEND RAMEN"
>>88031
223
290
765 all go
Juche will triumph.
Looks like ASCII decimals to me. Maybe with a caeser cipher?