One of the Asian countries will start collecting personal data without the consent of citizens.
13.09.2024
1576

Journalist
Shostal Oleksandr
13.09.2024
1576

The law adopted in South Korea allows companies to collect personal information of service users without their consent. The Personal Data Protection Commission reported that the new rules will come into force on September 15.
«According to the updated decree, companies no longer need to obtain users' consent to collect personal information required to provide services or conclude contracts, although explicit consent is still required to collect sensitive personal data», - said the commission statement.
According to the new rules, South Korean companies are allowed to collect the addresses and phone numbers of users that may be needed for order delivery. In addition, the authorities plan to distribute booklets among organizations to inform about the updated rules and prevent confusion.
Fight against the messenger Telegram
Earlier, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol announced the strengthening of measures against the messenger Telegram due to a deepfake scandal of a sexual nature involving South Korean women.
Read also
- Pensions and assistance to Ukrainians will be paid in a new way: the Pension Fund will receive information from banks
- Israel has postponed Iran's creation of a nuclear bomb for several years
- Applicants shown prices for education at the top five most popular universities in Ukraine
- Renting an apartment in the Czech Republic: what are the prices and where to look
- In Britain, a woman worked as a psychiatrist for over two decades with a fake diploma
- Russia transfers the bodies of its soldiers to Ukraine. Putin's aide reacted