South Korea

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South Korea Advances National AI Strategy Amid Industry Push and Civil Society Concerns
Jan. 2, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

South Korea’s national AI initiatives are reshaping industry standards, regulatory approaches and public engagement.

**People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) criticized South Korea’s draft National AI Action Plan for prioritizing AI industry promotion over fundamental rights like human dignity and self-determination of personal information.**
PSPD noted that the plan exempts public consent requirements and relaxes regulations for industrial convenience, echoing past policies that elevated economic growth above citizens’ rights. It identified six high-risk areas—information rights, health care and welfare, economy, defense, climate and society—and warned that equating state and corporate interests with individual rights undermines constitutionally guaranteed protections. PSPD also highlighted the plan’s insufficient 20-day public consultation period and called for extended, meaningful engagement with civil society and directly affected individuals.

**The AI Framework Act, set to take effect in January 2026, mirrors this industry-first approach by favoring minimal, flexible regulation to spur AI innovation without banning unethical practices or addressing domains where AI could threaten human safety and rights.**
Subordinate statutes under the act continue to prioritize industrial development over robust safeguards and disregard repeated civil society appeals for stronger protections. Analysts argue that without substantial amendments to both the Framework Act and the National AI Action Plan, South Korea risks perpetuating a regulatory environment that fails to constrain corporate AI deployments and leaves individuals vulnerable to algorithmic harms.

**In his 2026 New Year’s address, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Science and ICT Bae Kyung-hoon cast AI as the linchpin of national competitiveness.**
He outlined plans to build an “AI basic society” benefitting all citizens, secure an independent world-class AI model and accelerate AI transformation across sectors including manufacturing, shipbuilding and logistics. Bae emphasized integrating semiconductors and AI into a “full-stack K-AI” ecosystem for global market entry and pledged an institutional framework to prioritize corporate security and wage an “all-out war against hacking.”

**Ministers collectively declared 2026 a pivotal year for innovation, naming AI among five priority sectors alongside bio, cultural content, defense and energy.**
Prime Minister Kim Min-seok stressed industrial structure innovation and fair benefit distribution, while Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance Koo Yoon-chul framed AI transformation as key to securing physical AI leadership and regional hub status. Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Kim Jeong-gwan aimed to link regional development with AI-enhanced trade through a manufacturing AI (M.AX) strategy, and Climate, Energy and Environment Minister Kim Seong-hwan outlined regulatory reforms to support a renewable-nuclear energy mix. Financial Services Commission Chairman Lee Eok-won introduced a finance strategy to underpin AI-driven economic growth via inclusive, innovation-focused financial support.

**On the industry front, major technology firms are scaling up infrastructure and services to align with these ambitions.**
Naver has begun phase 2 construction at its Gak Sejong data center—phase 3 is slated for completion by 2029—and plans to launch AI agent services such as a shopping assistant and conversational search (AI Tab) next year before integrating them into an all-in-one agent, Agent N, by 2027. Kakao is acquiring 2,424 NVIDIA B200 accelerators for its Ansan data center, dedicating 16% of government-allocated GPUs to generative AI model training, and advancing its open-source Kanana2 language model toward a mixture-of-experts architecture. Kakao Tools, the company’s AI agent linked to ChatGPT, will integrate with platforms including maps, gifting, music streaming, finance and mobility, and it plans a second Namyangju data center by 2029.

**At CES 2026, LG Electronics showcased the humanoid home robot “LG Cloyd,” featuring advanced five-finger dexterity for household tasks, and reorganized its robotics efforts under the Home Appliance Business Division to accelerate commercialization.**
Samsung Electronics emphasized a hyper-connected AI ecosystem via its SmartThings platform, demonstrating seamless integration across appliances such as the Gemini AI-powered Bespoke refrigerator without deploying standalone robotic hubs. This divergence reflects a broader market shift toward comprehensive ecosystems and data-centric optimization in the AI home sector.

**SK Group chairman Choi Tae-won told employees that the company’s previous investments in memory, ICT, energy solutions and batteries have set the stage for the emerging AI era.**
SK plans to reinforce its AI semiconductor capabilities and deliver “AI integrated solutions” by harnessing competencies across its energy, telecommunications, construction and bio affiliates. Choi described AI-driven innovation as the foundation for future growth and pledged support for creative challenges and development throughout 2026.

**HD Hyundai Heavy Industries launched its Future of Shipyard (FOS) initiative to digitize and AI-enable shipbuilding in three stages.**
The first “visible shipyard” phase now offers real-time process and equipment monitoring; the second stage links process data with AI for predictive decision-making; and the third phase, targeting 2030, aims to establish an autonomous shipyard with a 30% productivity increase and a 30% reduction in construction time. AI applications already optimize steel plate cutting, automate design calculations and speed owner requirement processing, while pilots of “physical AI” robotics for welding and assembly and digital twin simulations are underway. Simultaneously, HD Hyundai pursues a diversified decarbonization strategy with ammonia- and methanol-powered vessels, electric propulsion demonstrations and preparatory work on hydrogen solutions and small modular reactors.

**A Zoom-commissioned report found that 92% of South Korean AI-native companies regard AI as a critical competitive advantage, the highest rate in the Asia-Pacific.**
These firms anticipate that federated AI architectures combining multiple models will drive greater accuracy and cost efficiency in 2026. They expect agentic AI to automate routine tasks, shifting workforce focus toward creative strategy and human interaction. In marketing, widespread AI-generated content will heighten the importance of brand authenticity, ethical decision-making and balancing privacy with personalization. The report also predicts a shift from AI adoption to the establishment of effective AI governance frameworks under the upcoming AI Basic Law, effective January 2026, which aims to codify transparent, responsible AI system management.
Samsung DRAM Technology Leak Triggers Legal Action and Exposes Global Industry Risks
Jan. 2, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

Unauthorized transfer of DRAM process technology has prompted legal action and exposed critical vulnerabilities in the global semiconductor industry.

**The Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office indicted 10 individuals—five former Samsung Electronics employees and five associates of ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT)—for violating trade secret and unfair competition laws.**
Investigators allege that beginning in September 2016, a former Samsung department head and other ex-employees obtained Samsung’s classified 18-nanometer DRAM process technology through a contact now at CXMT. They copied hundreds of process steps by hand, established shell companies, relocated offices frequently and used coded language to evade detection.

**From 2018 to early 2023, CXMT’s second development team, led by another former Samsung executive, refined the stolen DRAM process to suit Chinese manufacturing conditions.**
In 2020, CXMT technicians also acquired DRAM process technology from SK hynix via subcontractor channels. Leveraging these illicit acquisitions, CXMT became the first Chinese—and fourth global—company to mass-produce 10-nanometer-class DRAM in 2023. Samsung Electronics attributes a revenue decline of about 5 trillion won in 2024 directly to this technology leak.

**Semiconductors account for 20.8 percent of South Korea’s exports, and prosecutors estimate the national economic damage at tens of trillions of won.**
They opened the investigation in January 2024 after related probes uncovered multiple technology leaks through both domestic and overseas channels, confirming threats to the nation’s semiconductor sector and technological security.

**Founded in 2016 with support from government entities and design firms, CXMT recruited its initial development team—including the former Samsung department head now indicted—and received proprietary DRAM process steps through this network.**
The current legal actions aim to address the breach of state-designated core technology and prevent further unauthorized dissemination of critical semiconductor know-how.

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Jan. 2, 2026


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AI Bubble Burst in 2026 Risks Recession, Expert Warns

Chosun Ilbo | English | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | UndeterminedInvestor Sentiment

Professor Jack Jang of the University of Kansas warns that the AI investment boom driving U.S. growth may cool down in 2026, potentially leading to an economic recession. He highlights that overheated AI investment, combined with increased protectionism since the second Trump administration, is exerting downward pressure on the global economy. Jang points out that the effective U.S. tariff rate of around 20%, much higher than in previous decades, has contributed significantly to inflation, with 87% of U.S. companies experiencing supply price increases and over 70% passing these costs to consumers.

Jang forecasts that while AI investments and data center construction have sustained U.S. GDP growth recently, the bursting of the AI bubble—marked by waning investor optimism—could arrive this year. He agrees that certain tech stocks appear overvalued. Globally, economic growth faces headwinds from weakening demand in Europe and China, rising right-wing populism, economic bloc formation, and tensions between trade and industrial policies. He also raises concerns about rising government debt, noting that accumulating debt amid uncertain growth prospects poses long-term fiscal risks, especially as high interest rates and low growth erode policy flexibility.

Regarding labor markets, Jang observes increased uncertainty amplified by AI adoption, even without direct job replacement, and warns that fiscal stimulus measures considered by the Trump administration may risk reigniting inflation. On U.S.-China relations, Jang describes the situation as unpredictable but notes a current trade truce maintained by President Trump, expected to hold until a planned state visit in April. He believes the global trade system is eroding gradually due to tariffs, retaliation, and unilateral industrial policies, though it has not collapsed entirely.

Jang anticipates that security-justified managed trade and carve-outs will increase, risking long-term damage to global trade stability. He assesses South Korea as managing its geopolitical and economic balance better than Japan through pragmatic hedging and supply chain diversification.

Front and center, next in line to lead? New photos of Kim Ju-ae spark succession talk

Hankyoreh - E | English | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | North Korea

North Korean media recently published photos showing Kim Ju-ae walking in front of her father, Kim Jong-un, during a site visit to newly completed factories in several North Korean counties. This visit was part of a series of ribbon-cutting ceremonies for 20 county-level factories scheduled to be built this year. Kim Jong-un was accompanied by his daughter Kim Ju-ae and his wife Ri Sol-ju, marking Ri's first public appearance in six months.

These images have reignited discussions about Kim Ju-ae’s potential status as Kim Jong-un's successor. South Korea’s National Intelligence Service indicated that Kim Jong-un is “in the process of finalizing a succession narrative” and has constructed a revolutionary narrative supporting her as the presumptive heir. Some observers view recent photos of Kim Ju-ae engaging publicly, including one where she shakes hands with fighter pilots and the latest one of her leading her father, as signals reinforcing her candidacy.

However, other analysts caution against reading too much into these photographs. Similar images showing Kim Ju-ae positioned ahead of or alongside Kim Jong-un have been published before, and experts note that a true successor usually does not stand in front of the supreme leader in such displays. Officials describe the photographs as more familial than indicative of a successor, suggesting no concrete evidence of an official succession plan has emerged from the visual cues so far.

During the factory openings, Kim Jong-un emphasized the importance of advancing provincial development and delivering benefits to the people, aligning with his 20×10 Regional Development Policy. The events reiterate the regime’s focus on economic and regional progress amid broader political continuity concerns.

Operation control of Marine divisions to be restored to Marine Corps in military overhaul

Yonhap | English | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | Geopolitical Conflict and Disputes

South Korea's defense ministry announced that operational control of the 1st and 2nd Marine divisions, currently under the Army, will be restored to the Marine Corps for the first time in 50 years. The 1st Marine Division’s control will revert to the Marine Corps by the end of 2026, followed by the 2nd Marine Division by 2028. Presently, the 1st Division is under the Army’s 2nd Operation Command and the 2nd Division is controlled by the Army’s Capital Corps.

The Marine Corps will remain under the Navy, but its independence will be reinforced by granting its commander command and oversight authority equivalent to the chiefs of staff of other military branches. The defense minister also indicated plans to consider promoting Marines to four-star general ranks, as the current Marine Corps commander holds a three-star general position. Additionally, there will be a review of establishing an independent operations command and equipping the Marine Corps with a command structure and weapon systems comparable to other armed forces.

These changes are part of President Lee Jae Myung’s efforts to restructure South Korea’s military, composed of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, to strengthen the Marine Corps’ autonomy within the national defense framework.

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