Terrorists used apps to ‘plot and incite’

Using a smartphone to receive regular notifications to do something could be of enormous benefit, especially to people who spend most of their day sitting.

Using a smartphone to receive regular notifications to do something could be of enormous benefit, especially to people who spend most of their day sitting.

Published Aug 7, 2014

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Seoul - China has confirmed its decision to block popular foreign messaging services like Kakao and Line as an anti-terrorist measure, South Korean authorities said on Thursday.

The messaging apps have been disrupted since July 1, triggering queries from the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning in Seoul.

KakaoTalk is operated by South Korea's Kakao, while Line is run by a Japanese subsidiary of South Korea's biggest portal Naver.

The ministry said it had been informed by Beijing that there was evidence terrorist groups were using messaging apps to “plot and incite” attacks.

“The ministry will continue negotiations with Chinese authorities so that users' inconveniences be resolved at the earliest possible date,” the director of its Internet Policy unit, Lee Jin-Gyu, told reporters.

Lee said other foreign messaging services like Didi, TalkBox and Vower had also been affected.

China blocks access to a host of websites including YouTube and Twitter using a system known as the “Great Firewall”, and restrictions are tightened before dates the government considers sensitive. - Sapa-AFP

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