South Korean government forms task force for Coupang data breach

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.

The decision was made at a meeting of science and technology-related ministers chaired by Science Minister Bae Kyung-hoon on December 18. Led by Ryu Je-myung, second vice minister of the Ministry of Science and ICT, the task force will include officials from the science ministry, the Personal Information Protection Committee, the Korea Media Communications Commission, and the Financial Services Commission. It will hold regular and ad hoc meetings to share information on police and government investigations into the breach and discuss ways to strengthen the company's accountability.

The move follows the government's vow to take stern action against Coupang, which confirmed last month that personal information from 33.7 million customer accounts had been compromised. The company has faced criticism for its lukewarm response to the incident and an intransigent stance toward Korean authorities. During a parliamentary hearing on Wednesday, Harold Rogers, Coupang's interim chief executive officer, apologized for the breach but did not present detailed measures on customer compensation or data security.

Coupang's headquarters is in Seoul, and the breach has dealt a significant blow to the company. The government plans to closely monitor the firm's response.

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South Korea's presidential office is set to hold an emergency meeting on December 25 over a massive data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang. The leak affected 33.7 million customers, undermining the company's delivery model built on social trust. A former U.S. security adviser has criticized Korean scrutiny as aggressive targeting of a U.S.-listed firm.

Following the December 18 announcement, South Korea's interagency task force investigating the Coupang data breach held its inaugural meeting on December 23 to probe the incident affecting 33.7 million users and discuss enhanced user protections.

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Following the National Assembly's two-day hearing on its massive data breach, South Korea's government pledged to pursue all legal measures against Coupang Inc., condemning the e-commerce firm's passive response and data handling lapses amid public outrage.

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.

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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.

Le leader du commerce électronique sud-coréen Coupang a finalisé un accord de près de 1,2 milliard de dollars (1,68 billion de wons) pour indemniser 33,7 millions d'utilisateurs touchés par sa violation de données de novembre 2025. Bien que suivant l'annonce du plan de bons la semaine dernière, les termes ont fait l'objet de réactions négatives de la part des parties prenantes qui estiment qu'ils ne compensent pas suffisamment les dommages.

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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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