Coupang founder Kim Bom-suk apologizes at press conference announcing 50,000 won vouchers for 33.7 million data breach victims.
Coupang founder Kim Bom-suk apologizes at press conference announcing 50,000 won vouchers for 33.7 million data breach victims.
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Coupang to provide 50,000 won vouchers to 33.7 million data breach victims

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E-commerce giant Coupang has announced a 1.68 trillion won compensation plan for 33.7 million users affected by a recent data breach. The package includes 50,000 won in vouchers per person, with distributions starting next month. This follows founder Kim Bom-suk's first public apology over the incident.

Coupang Inc., South Korea's leading e-commerce firm, revealed a compensation plan worth more than 1.68 trillion won ($1.17 billion) on December 29, 2025, in response to a massive personal data breach. The initiative targets 33.7 million affected customers with 50,000 won in four types of vouchers: 5,000 won for the e-commerce platform, 5,000 won for Coupang Eats food delivery, 20,000 won for travel products, and 20,000 won for R.LUX luxury beauty and fashion items. Distributions will begin gradually from January 15, 2026, and even former users who closed accounts will receive them via text message.

The breach was first reported to authorities on November 20, 2025, affecting 4,500 accounts, but expanded to 33.7 million by November 29—nearly the entire user base of 24.7 million active users in the third quarter and about two-thirds of South Korea's population. Compromised data included names, phone numbers, email addresses, and delivery addresses.

Coupang identified a former employee as responsible through forensic evidence, recovered the hacking equipment, and obtained a confession. The company claims only data from about 3,000 accounts was saved and later deleted, with no external leak. However, the government dismissed these findings as a "unilateral claim," as a joint public-private investigation has yet to conclude.

The day before, on December 28, founder and board chairman Kim Bom-suk issued his first apology, stating, "I have caused huge frustration and disappointment by failing to communicate clearly since the onset of the incident." He admitted the delayed response was a "wrong judgment" and again declined to attend a parliamentary hearing citing a prearranged schedule, drawing criticism from lawmakers.

Interim CEO Harold Rogers said, "Taking this incident as a turning point, Coupang will wholeheartedly embrace customer-centric principles and fulfill its responsibilities to the very end." The breach has intensified debates on data security in South Korea, with ongoing probes likely to follow.

Qué dice la gente

Reactions on X to Coupang's 1.68 trillion won voucher compensation plan for 33.7 million data breach victims are mixed. Some users praise the swift and large-scale response, planning to continue using the service. Others express skepticism, criticizing the vouchers as low-value coupons split across services that require additional spending, questioning their adequacy for restoring trust. Media outlets and journalists neutrally report the details.

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U.S.-listed e-commerce giant Coupang Inc. reported record annual sales for 2025 despite a massive data breach that hurt fourth-quarter results. Founder and Chairman Bom Kim issued his first in-person apology to customers during Friday's earnings call. This follows a written apology in late December.

El gigante del comercio electrónico Coupang, que cotiza en Estados Unidos, registró pérdidas netas en el primer trimestre como consecuencia de una filtración masiva de datos de clientes en Corea del Sur. La empresa reportó un déficit de 266 millones de dólares entre enero y marzo, frente a un beneficio de 114 millones de dólares registrado un año antes. El fundador y presidente, Bom Kim, señaló que los vales emitidos por única vez y las ineficiencias temporales derivadas de una menor demanda fueron factores clave.

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El ministro de Ciencia Bae Kyung-hoon dijo el miércoles que la investigación del gobierno a la unidad surcoreana de Coupang se está llevando a cabo bajo principios legales sin discriminación, refutando las críticas de círculos políticos de EE.UU. La declaración se produjo después de que el Comité Judicial de la Cámara de Representantes de EE.UU. iniciara una investigación sobre lo que calificó como el enfoque discriminatorio de Corea del Sur hacia empresas estadounidenses. La pesquisa sigue a una masiva brecha de datos en Coupang que afectó a más de 33,6 millones de cuentas.

La Comisión de Comercio Justo de Corea del Sur ha designado al presidente de Coupang, Kim Bom-suk, conocido como Bom Kim, como el accionista mayoritario de la empresa. El cambio de una designación corporativa a una individual cita pruebas de la influencia del hermano de Kim, Kim Yoo-seok. La medida ha generado preocupación por posibles fricciones con Estados Unidos.

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