-
The evolutionary process of Ilbe bugs - users from Korea's most popular conservative netizen portal, is portrayed in a set of cartoons, generating much attention
-
Netizens criticise Ilbe members for mocking the death of musician Lim Yook-taek of musical group Ulala Session, after his struggle with cancer ended in his death.
-
The ROK Air Force PR team releases a parody of hit musical film Les Misérables, a sure hit among the star-crossed and snowed-in lovers serving time in the military.
-
Korean netizens are amazed at the extent to which South Korea appears to have changed since these photos were taken by a foreign visitor in the early 1960s.
-
A netizen shares his knowledge on how to lure the much revered 'Sushi girl' Japanese penpal, Google Translate being among one of the preferred tools of choice.
-
The young generation's embrace of a revisionist perspective on former military dictators is raising concerns that Korea's democratic gains may erode.
-
Forget Kim Jong Un's satellite fireworks and Japan's territorial claims: in South Korea, a very different kind of online war is waging between netizens.
-
advertisement
-
Ilbe emerged as an influential conservative online community throughout the presidential election campaign. A netizen explains its history and identity.
-
Translated Korean netizen reactions, internet memes, parodies, and jokes related to the 2012 South Korean presidential election race and its three heated debates.
-
A middle-aged man takes advantage of a very drunk girl the Seoul Metro by leaning on her and putting his arm round her, seemingly intending to sexually assault her.
-
A popular saying in Korean says that Northern women are the most attractive women in Korea, but some netizens on conservative online community Ilbe argue otherwise.
-
A conservative netizen by the name of 'Gan-gyul' apologises to fans after loosing an online debate to a prominent progressive pundit, Professor Chin Jung-kwon
-
Netizens from the infamously conservative site Ilbe respond to their online reputation on the Korean internet as losers by uploading images of their credentials.
-
As the university entrance exams for South Korean universities draw closer, Korean netizens share education-related jokes and images from the Korean internet
-
Two Japanese buskers are spotted in Seoul's Hongdae district singing 'We should love one another!' Korean netizens admit it is the extreme right-wingers they hate.
-
A rare set of photos of developing Seoul emerge on the Internet, depicting the rapid modernization process Korea experienced in the past few decades.