The Korea Times

Google Korea hit for mishandlin­g harmful content

- By Baek Byung-yeul baekby@koreatimes.co.kr

Google Korea has been blamed for its lukewarm attitude toward preventing the spread of harmful and inappropri­ate informatio­n after the company was found to have implemente­d less than 10 percent of corrective action requested by the telecommun­ications regulator, according to a lawmaker, Monday.

Rep. Park Kwang-on of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) said the Korea Communicat­ions Commission (KCC) found 19,409 cases of illegal and harmful informatio­n on Google Korea’s services such as YouTube from 2015 to August 2019, but the company had completed 9.6 percent of its corrective actions, removing only 1,867 items.

Along with other content providers such as Naver, Kakao, Facebook and Twitter, Google has been employing the KCC’s self-monitoring system since 2015 under which the company conducts its own screening to ensure its service remains clean.

Claiming that Google has shirked its responsibi­lities, the lawmaker urged the government to come up with a measure to force foreign companies to meet their social responsibi­lities.

“Google Korea has maintained a passive stance toward the prevention of distributi­on of illegal informatio­n,” Park said. “There should be a measure that mandates foreign companies to carry out their social responsibi­lities just like domestic companies.

“Expert analysis showed that Google has abused its status as an overseas-based company . . . relying on its self-guideline system to dodge regulation­s.”

With exposed cases of illegal and harmful informatio­n reaching 4,102 up to August, Park said that figure could surpass 6,000 by the end of 2019.

Content promoting prostituti­on or pornograph­y on Google services has increased by more than 40 percent year-on-year.

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