Settings

Theme

Every reference to Kim Jong Un in official HTML is wrapped in a ﹤nobr﹥

twitter.com

58 points by 1as 9 years ago · 19 comments

Reader

gozur88 9 years ago

It's good to be the king, I suppose. I'd love to have all my pet peeves encoded into law.

closeparen 9 years ago

Not as cool as North Korea's extremely zealous use of the strong tag: https://gizmodo.com/5599650/in-north-korea-even-the-html-cod...

jaredandrews 9 years ago

I had no idea this tag existed so I looked it up: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/no...

Turns out it's a non-standard tag. FireFox supports it though and the Red Star OS uses a browser that is a fork of Firefox[0].

My understanding is that the Red Star OS is the only OS used in North Korea. So I guess that means in North Korea, `nobr` _is_ in the standard.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Star_OS

ijafri 9 years ago

I guess due to his last name. Un?

If you break the title of this post before his last name it would read

Un in official.

But we also know that isn't the only reason. If you are his age with nukes I guess most would have H1 tag wrapped around it too.

  • ahakki 9 years ago

    Yes. These tags are correct and necessary.

    Can't see what the fuss is about, other than that NK knows how to use HTML.

    • stevenjgarner 9 years ago

      DPRK seems to know a LOT more than HTML. They are not dependent on (read vulnerable to) the Internet in the burgeoning ways of the rest of the world. They clearly see it asymmetrically, as our Kryptonite:

      1) "its connection to a hacking group called Lazarus that is linked to last year’s $81 million cyber heist at the Bangladesh central bank and the 2014 attack on Sony’s Hollywood studio" - https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cyber-northkorea-exclusiv...

      2) "Bureau 121 is staffed by some of North Korea's most talented computer experts and is run by the Korean military." - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bureau_121#cite_note-reuters-1

      3) "The wannacry ransomware has a link to suspected North Korean hackers" - https://www.wired.com/2017/05/wannacry-ransomware-link-suspe...

      • oh_sigh 9 years ago

        This doesn't tell me they know what they're doing. This tells me they are scrambling for a few million here and there when they can. Wouldn't you guess that a state funded actor could be much more dangerous than encrypting your personal files and demanding $400 while leaving a kill switch easily available?

    • Skunkleton 9 years ago

      > NK knows how to use HTML.

      This is a disturbing leap in their technological capabilities. Whats next? Nukes? That would be unthinkable.

  • grzm 9 years ago

    Here's where the common usage of first and last name break down: his family name is Kim. I suspect it's along the lines of what you're getting at: to keep the name together.

    I'm not sure how interesting this is in and of itself. It might be interesting to see if this is a special case. If it is, is there a particular reason for it? One could speculate all kinds of reasons, but I'm not sure how useful that is without actually knowing why.

    • ijafri 9 years ago

      Added the alternative and more realistic version of my analysis in the last part.

civilian 9 years ago

It's also bolded and, at least in the left sidebar of news articles, it was set to be 1pt larger than the surrounding font size.

thesmallestcat 9 years ago

I want this in my linters. Why take a chance?

eddanger 9 years ago

Dear Leader can't be broken in HTML or real life.

kenver 9 years ago

Clearly just stop his name getting split, but it's also a nice bonus that it's semantically correct http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=nob

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection