Journalists Association of Korea
Coverage of Journalists Association of Korea in the Nexus archive.
- South Korean law targeting ‘fake news’ takes effect as journalists’ groups raise concerns
South Korea enforced a law allowing steep punitive damages against media and social media influencers for spreading false information. Journalists' groups warn the law could suppress public discourse and enable censorship due to vague definitions and lack of safeguards.
- South Korean law targeting ‘fake news’ takes effect, but journalists say it discourages critical reporting and can lead to self-censorship
South Korea enforced a law allowing punitive damages against news outlets and social media influencers for spreading false information, prompting concerns from journalists and civil liberties groups about self-censorship and restricted critical reporting. The law permits fines of up to 1 billion won for repeat violations and mandates content removal by large social media platforms upon reporting false information.
- South Korean law targeting ‘fake news’ takes effect as journalists’ groups raise concerns
South Korea enforced a law allowing steep punitive damages against news outlets and social media influencers for spreading false information. Journalists' groups warned the law could chill public discourse and invite censorship due to vague definitions and lack of safeguards.
- South Korean law targeting 'fake news' takes effect as journalists' groups raise concerns
South Korea began enforcing a law allowing steep punitive damages against news outlets and social media influencers for spreading false information, as journalist groups warned it could suppress free discourse and invite censorship. The law permits courts to award damages up to five times proven losses and fines for repeated dissemination of false content, sparking concerns about its vague language and potential impact on critical reporting.
- South Korean law targeting 'fake news' takes effect as journalists' groups raise concerns
South Korea enforced a new law allowing punitive damages against news outlets and social media influencers for spreading false information, prompting concerns from journalist groups about censorship and chilling public discourse. The law permits fines of up to 1 billion won for repeated distribution of false content and requires social media platforms to remove reported false information.