S. Korea Vows Global Pursuit of Webtoon Piracy, Targets Newtoki Operator
The pledge signals South Korea's intent to escalate cross-border enforcement against a major piracy operation whose operator has changed nationality, testing the limits of international cooperation and new domestic blocking laws.
Key Facts
- South Korea's Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Hwi-young Chae pledged on May 28 to pursue webtoon copyright offenders globally.
- The operator of the illegal site Newtoki renounced Korean citizenship and became a naturalized Japanese citizen, complicating extradition efforts.
- Newtoki abruptly shut down on April 27 after South Korea implemented emergency site-blocking measures, but a site branded as Newtoki reappeared a day later.
- Legitimate platforms like Naver Webtoon saw a surge in users after the emergency blocking measures were enacted.
- Minister Chae acknowledged that illegal sites evade enforcement by relocating servers and changing domains, and said completely eradicating piracy may be unrealistic.
Reporting from 1 source: Anime News Network.
South Korea's Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Hwi-young Chae pledged on May 28 to pursue webtoon copyright offenders globally, specifically targeting the operator of the illegal site Newtoki who renounced Korean citizenship for Japanese. Chae acknowledged enforcement challenges including server relocation and domain changes, while noting a surge in legitimate platform users after emergency site-blocking measures.
Speaking at a policy advisory meeting in Seoul, Minister Chae said the government would pursue copyright offenders 'to the very end,' regardless of location or nationality. The operator of Newtoki, one of the largest illegal webtoon distribution platforms, reportedly renounced Korean citizenship and became a naturalized Japanese citizen, complicating extradition efforts. Chae called for Japanese cooperation but acknowledged limited progress in cross-border investigations.
Chae also addressed the limits of South Korea's emergency site-blocking system, which was implemented just before Newtoki abruptly shut down on April 27. A site branded as Newtoki reappeared a day later. While the blocking measure has driven a surge in users on legitimate platforms like Naver Webtoon, Chae noted that illegal sites evade enforcement by relocating servers and changing domains. 'New technologies are being used for copyright infringement, making enforcement increasingly difficult,' he said, adding that completely eradicating piracy may be unrealistic but the government will continue pursuing offenders through all available means.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.