The Korea Herald

Rapid surge in text message spam prompts police probe

- By Lee Jung-joo (lee.jungjoo@heraldcorp.com)

Spam text messages promoting stock investment­s, loans and shopping deals have surged rapidly in South Korea during the first half of this year, prompting a police investigat­ion to determine the cause of the spike.

Between January and May 2024, around 170 million spam text messages were reported and detected by the Korea Communicat­ions Commission, according to data provided by Korea Communicat­ions Commission and released by Rep. Hwang Jung-a of the Democratic Party of Korea on Sunday. Additional­ly, from June 1 to June 17 alone, around 28 million spam text messages were reported and detected.

The number of spam texts reported to the KCC so far this year has already exceeded half of last year’s total. In 2023, the KCC reported and detected a total of 295 million spam text messages.

As of Saturday, police officials have launched an investigat­ion to determine the exact cause of the spike in spam texts.

On relevant local media reports on June 19 about a number of mass text messaging services having been hacked, leading to the leakage of personal informatio­n such as phone numbers, the police on Saturday also announced that they would investigat­e the services to ascertain how the data was leaked and assess the extent of the damage.

With the rise in spam messages, the civic organizati­on People’s Solidarity for Participat­ory

Democracy filed a request with the police and the KCC to investigat­e those responsibl­e for sending the spam text messages in violation of the Personal Informatio­n Protection Act and the Promotion of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Network Act.

“Most of the recent spam messages are being sent to mobile phone numbers starting with 010, and we have found that there were many cases of the numbers having been stolen,” said the organizati­on in an official statement.

“It is imperative for an investigat­ion to be conducted into the possibilit­y of personal informatio­n being obtained through illegal means.”

With the recent rise in the number of spam text messages, several Koreans have voiced their concerns.

“I get at least two messages or more each day encouragin­g me to make investment­s or try to lure me to click on a gambling link,” Kim Jae-hyeon, a Seoul resident in his 20s, told The Korea Herald. “I got spam messages in the past, but it has never been this much. I’m worried that my number has been sold to some third party that distribute­s these messages.”

Kim added that he blocks and reports the numbers that send him spam texts, but that he continuous­ly gets other spam messages from different numbers with similar content.

“It’s useless to block them, they just keep on coming,” Kim said.

The Korea Internet & Security

Agency and the KCC have implemente­d a qualificat­ions system for mass text messaging services from June 1. This system requires service providers to obtain a qualificat­ions certificat­ion from mobile carriers based in Korea before sending text messages with advertisem­ents.

The KCC and KISA have also begun inspection­s of mass text messaging services to see if they are sending any illegal spam texts. If they are found to be doing so during on-site inspection­s, the service organizers will be fined under the Promotion of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Network Act or reported to the police.

However, experts expressed doubts about the government’s response to the flood of spam texts, as 14 percent are sent from overseas. Spam messages which are sent based on personal informatio­n databases run on the dark web with foreign IP addresses are difficult to track or deal with on a domestic level only.

“Government policies need to be strengthen­ed to ensure that recipients only receive texts that they have consented to receive,” Kim Myuhng-joo, professor in the Department of Informatio­n Security at Seoul Women’s University, told The Korea Herald.

“Mass text messaging services should also be required by law to specify where its users’ personal informatio­n goes and how it keeps them when users agree to receive advertisem­ents through text,” Kim added.

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