Government press conference announcing Coupang data breach affecting 33.67 million users, far exceeding initial 3,000 claim, with fines and probes.
Government press conference announcing Coupang data breach affecting 33.67 million users, far exceeding initial 3,000 claim, with fines and probes.
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Government confirms 33.67 million records leaked in Coupang breach

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A government-private investigation team confirmed that 33.67 million user records were leaked in Coupang's major data breach. This dwarfs the company's initial claim of 3,000 affected accounts, with fines and further probes announced over delayed reporting and evidence mishandling.

A joint public-private probe into Coupang Korea's data breach, which occurred in November 2025, concluded on February 10, 2026, led by the Ministry of Science and ICT. The investigation confirmed that 33.67 million users' names and email addresses were leaked, with the company's delivery list page accessed 148 million times. This page contained names, phone numbers, delivery addresses, and anonymized apartment entrance passwords.

Coupang initially reported only 3,000 compromised accounts but later acknowledged an additional 165,000. The probe's findings of 33.67 million did not include this later figure. Hackers exploited a vulnerability in the authentication system by forging digital passes to access servers.

The ministry highlighted that Coupang became aware of the breach at 4 p.m. on November 17 but delayed reporting until 9:35 p.m. on November 19, violating the 24-hour disclosure rule. It plans to impose a fine of up to 30 million won (about $20,560) and launch a separate investigation for failing to preserve evidence, including missing web logs from 2024 and app records from May-June 2025.

Coupang must submit recurrence prevention measures this month, with inspections scheduled for June-July. The breach potentially affects nearly all of Coupang's user base, impacting about two-thirds of South Korea's population. The analysis reviewed 25.6 terabytes of web access logs.

Ce que les gens disent

Initial reactions on X to the government's confirmation of a 33.67 million user record leak from Coupang highlight widespread outrage over the discrepancy with the company's initial 3,000 claim, demands for CEO accountability and fines, suspicions of insider trading around the announcement, concerns about government ties protecting the company, and criticisms of data mishandling including addresses viewed 148 million times.

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Dramatic illustration depicting the Coupang data breach, with data spilling from a cracked digital vault and investigators on scene.
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Coupang data breach spanned June to November

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

A massive data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers from June 24 to November 8. Officials revealed the attacker exploited the company's electronic signature key, prompting a thorough government investigation. The incident has heightened public concerns over South Korea's data protection capabilities.

South Korea's largest e-commerce firm Coupang is embroiled in controversy after a data breach exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers. The leak occurred from June to November, undetected for five months. Authorities are considering fines and class-action lawsuits.

Rapporté par l'IA

A massive data breach at South Korea's leading e-commerce firm Coupang has exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers. Police are tracking a Chinese former employee suspect using an IP address, while the government considers fines up to 1 trillion won. The breach, starting in June, went undetected for five months.

South Korean police have started forensic examination of a suspect's laptop, recovered by Coupang in the data breach affecting 33 million customers. The e-commerce firm claims a former employee accessed and saved data from 3,000 accounts but deleted it without external transfer—a statement dismissed by authorities as unverified.

Rapporté par l'IA

The South Korean government announced on December 18 that it will form an interagency task force to handle the recent large-scale data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang. The task force will share information from police and government investigations and discuss ways to strengthen the company's accountability. Coupang confirmed last month that personal information from 33.7 million customer accounts was compromised.

South Korea's Fair Trade Commission chief Ju Byung-gi stated in a radio interview that a temporary suspension of e-commerce giant Coupang's operations is possible amid an ongoing data breach investigation. This measure could be taken if remedies for affected consumers prove insufficient. The science ministry criticized Coupang's internal probe as one-sided.

Rapporté par l'IA

Harold Rogers, interim CEO of Coupang, underwent 12 hours of police questioning over allegations of evidence destruction linked to a massive data breach. Authorities estimate the incident affected nearly 33 million users, disputing Coupang's claim of only 3,000 accounts impacted. Rogers declined to comment upon leaving the agency.

 

 

 

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