U.S. voices concerns over South Korea's network act revision

The U.S. State Department has voiced significant concerns over a recent revision to South Korea's Information and Communications Network Act, warning that it could negatively impact U.S. online platforms and undermine technology cooperation. The amendment, aimed at curbing false and fabricated online information like deepfakes, was passed by South Korea's National Assembly last week and approved by the cabinet on Tuesday. This has raised worries about potential diplomatic and trade tensions between the allies.

South Korea's National Assembly passed an amendment to the Information and Communications Network Act last week. The revision aims to prevent the spread of illegal and fabricated online information that incites violence and discrimination, with a particular focus on defamatory deepfakes, though it extends further.

Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers voiced concerns over the amendment in social media posts on X on Tuesday. She wrote, "South Korea's proposed amendment to its Network Act, ostensibly focused on redressing defamatory deepfakes, reaches much further -- and endangers tech cooperation." She added, "Deepfakes are understandably concerning, but it's better to give victims civil remedies than give regulators invasive license for viewpoint-based censorship."

Rogers' remarks appear to stem from worries about the potential impact on major U.S. online platform companies, such as Google and Meta. The Donald Trump administration has sought to restore freedom of speech and end censorship.

A State Department spokesperson, responding to questions from Yonhap News Agency on Wednesday, stated, "The United States has significant concerns with the ROK government's approval of an amendment to the Network Act that negatively impacts the business of U.S.-based online platforms and undermines free expression." The spokesperson added, "The ROK should not impose unnecessary barriers around digital services. The United States opposes censorship and remains dedicated to working with the ROK to promote a free and open digital environment for all."

In a joint fact sheet released in November outlining bilateral trade and security agreements, the two countries committed to ensuring U.S. companies face no discrimination or unnecessary barriers in laws and policies concerning digital services, including online platform regulations. The revision has sparked concerns that it may contravene this pledge.

Was die Leute sagen

U.S. State Department officials voiced concerns that South Korea's Network Act revision exceeds deepfake regulation and threatens tech cooperation and free speech. Korean news outlets neutrally reported the statements. Conservative users welcomed the criticism, labeling the law as censorship and a sign of authoritarianism.

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Legal revisions end era of anti-North Korea leaflet campaigns

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Recent legal revisions have made it difficult to scatter propaganda leaflets into North Korea, effectively ending the era of such campaigns, the unification ministry said. The spokesperson expressed hope that the measures could restore inter-Korean ties and build peace.

South Korea's trade ministry said on January 8 it will expand communications with the United States to avert potential conflicts over revisions to the country's network law. Last week, the U.S. State Department voiced "significant" concerns about a recently passed amendment to the Information and Communications Network Act, aimed at curbing false online information, warning it could spark trade tensions. To mitigate this, the ministry plans to intensify outreach on non-tariff trade barriers.

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South Korea's Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo departed for Washington on January 11, 2026, following the trade ministry's recent announcement of intensified U.S. outreach. The trip aims to explain Seoul's policy on revisions to its network act curbing false online information, amid U.S. worries over impacts on platforms and free expression.

South Korea's Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo met with U.S. lawmakers and officials in Washington this week to address concerns over the country's investigation into a massive data breach at Coupang, warning against the issue turning into a trade dispute between the two nations. Yeo emphasized that the probe is being conducted in line with relevant laws and should not be viewed as a trade matter. Coupang, a U.S.-listed company, experienced a leak of personal data from about 34 million customers late last year.

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South Korea's unification ministry announced on December 26 that it will take administrative steps to allow public access to the Rodong Sinmun, the main newspaper of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party. The move aims to ease restrictions previously imposed due to concerns over North Korean propaganda. It seeks to uphold the public's right to know and promote inter-Korean exchanges.

South Korea's unification ministry on Monday dismissed a report claiming it proposed a constitutional revision to President Lee Jae-myung to recognize North Korea as a separate nation. The claim emerged from a local newspaper alleging the suggestion was made during a closed-door policy briefing last Friday as part of efforts to resume engagement with Pyongyang. Ministry spokesperson Yoon Min-ho rejected the report as "groundless and false."

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The European Commission’s first report on the Digital Services Act, published Monday, describes the law as “content‑agnostic” and aligned with fundamental rights, while civil society groups and U.S. officials warn it could chill speech and burden American tech firms.

 

 

 

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