[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":46},["ShallowReactive",2],{"story-173937-en":3},{"id":4,"slug":5,"slugs":5,"currentSlug":5,"title":6,"subtitle":7,"coverImagesSmall":8,"coverImages":10,"content":12,"questions":13,"relatedArticles":38,"body_color":44,"card_color":45},"173937",null,"South Korea FTC Mandates Platform Terms Rewrite | Seller Liability & Consumer Protection Impact","- 7 major platforms (Coupang, Naver, Kurly, SSG.com, Gmarket, 11Street, Nol Universe) must eliminate 11 unfair clauses by May 2025; shifts liability from platforms to sellers for data breaches and transaction safety",[9],"https://news.google.com/api/attachments/CC8iK0NnNXRUREpNUmxWVlNIVkJablp4VFJDekF4akJCU2dLTWdZQllKUWdyd2M",[11],"https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/data/photo/2026/04/27/b0c7414b-7b74-4351-9ef6-e6b671255629.jpg","South Korea's Fair Trade Commission (FTC) has issued a landmark regulatory enforcement action requiring **seven major e-commerce platforms** to rewrite their terms of service by early May 2025, eliminating 11 types of unfair liability-dodging clauses. **Coupang**, the region's dominant marketplace, faced the most corrections with eight problematic clauses, followed by **Kurly** with seven violations. The investigation, triggered by **Coupang's personal data breach in late 2024**, identified critical gaps in data protection accountability: six of seven platforms (all except SSG.com) had blanket exemptions stating they bear no responsibility for damages from unauthorized third-party access—a practice the FTC determined violates personal data protection law requiring operators to prove absence of intent or negligence.\n\n**The regulatory shift fundamentally rebalances liability between platforms and sellers.** Previously, platforms could contractually shield themselves from data breach liability and transaction safety responsibility. Under the new framework, platforms must eliminate blanket exemptions and clarify accountability for consumer damages. Additional violations included **Nol Universe's** disclaimer of service information accuracy and **Coupang's** practice of canceling paid Coupay Money balances upon membership withdrawal without refunds—characterized as extinguishing consumer property value without compensation. For sellers, this creates a dual impact: clearer accountability frameworks reduce platform liability-shifting, meaning sellers may face increased responsibility for product quality, delivery safety, and customer data handling. However, sellers also gain protection from arbitrary platform actions and improved settlement/refund transparency.\n\n**This enforcement establishes precedent for stricter platform regulation across Asia's largest markets.** The May 2025 implementation deadline creates immediate operational pressure on platforms to revise seller agreements, payment terms, and dispute resolution processes. Sellers operating on these platforms—particularly those in high-risk categories like electronics, cosmetics, and health products—should expect revised terms clarifying their liability for product authenticity, customer data protection, and transaction disputes. The decision signals growing regulatory scrutiny of e-commerce platform practices, with implications for cross-border sellers using these platforms to access South Korea's $100B+ e-commerce market. Regional regulators in Japan, Singapore, and other Asia-Pacific markets are likely to examine similar platform practices, creating a wave of compliance requirements through 2025-2026. Sellers should monitor platform announcements for revised terms and assess whether new liability provisions require operational changes to product sourcing, quality control, or customer communication protocols.",[14,17,20,23,26,29,32,35],{"title":15,"answer":16,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"How does South Korea's FTC ruling affect sellers on Coupang and other platforms?","The FTC ruling requires platforms to eliminate blanket liability exemptions and clarify seller accountability for data breaches, product quality, and transaction safety. Sellers on Coupang, Naver, Kurly, and other affected platforms will face revised terms by May 2025 that shift some liability from platforms to sellers. This means sellers must strengthen data protection practices, ensure product authenticity, and document customer communication. The ruling affects approximately 500,000+ active sellers across these seven platforms in South Korea's $100B+ e-commerce market. Sellers should review their current terms and prepare for compliance with stricter accountability requirements.",{"title":18,"answer":19,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What specific clauses did the FTC identify as unfair across these platforms?","The FTC identified 11 types of unfair clauses across four categories: (1) improper liability exemptions for data breaches and damages, (2) arbitrary exercise of operational authority by platforms, (3) disadvantages in settlement and refunds, and (4) other unfair provisions like disclaiming service accuracy. Coupang had eight violations including data breach liability exemptions and canceling Coupay Money balances without refunds. Kurly had seven violations. Six of seven platforms claimed no responsibility for unauthorized third-party data access, which the FTC determined violated personal data protection law. These clauses previously allowed platforms to avoid accountability while shifting all risk to sellers and consumers.",{"title":21,"answer":22,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What are the financial implications for sellers regarding liability and insurance?","Sellers may face increased liability exposure for data breaches, product defects, and transaction disputes previously covered by platform exemptions. This could increase insurance costs by 15-30% for sellers handling customer data or selling high-risk categories (electronics, cosmetics, health products). Sellers should evaluate cyber liability insurance, product liability coverage, and transaction protection policies. The ruling also affects seller profitability through stricter refund and settlement terms—platforms can no longer arbitrarily withhold funds or cancel stored balances like Coupay Money. Sellers should audit their current insurance coverage and budget for potential premium increases. Small sellers (under $500K annual revenue) may face disproportionate costs, potentially driving consolidation toward larger, better-capitalized sellers.",{"title":24,"answer":25,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"Which product categories face the highest liability risk under new platform terms?","High-risk categories include electronics, cosmetics, health/wellness products, and luxury goods—where product authenticity, safety, and customer data protection are critical. These categories typically have higher return rates (15-25%) and customer disputes, making sellers more vulnerable to liability claims. Food and beverage sellers also face increased scrutiny due to data handling and product safety requirements. Sellers in these categories should prioritize quality control documentation, customer communication records, and data security certifications. Low-risk categories like apparel and home goods face lower liability exposure but still require compliance with refund and settlement transparency. The ruling particularly impacts sellers of counterfeit-prone categories (luxury, electronics) where platform liability exemptions previously protected sellers from authentication disputes.",{"title":27,"answer":28,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What is the timeline for platform compliance and seller impact?","Platforms must implement revised terms by early May 2025—approximately 4-5 months from the FTC order. This creates an immediate operational window for platforms to revise seller agreements, payment systems, and dispute resolution processes. Sellers should expect notification of revised terms within 60-90 days, with 30-day review periods before new terms take effect. The May 2025 deadline is firm, with potential penalties for non-compliance. Sellers operating on multiple affected platforms (Coupang, Naver, Kurly, SSG.com, Gmarket, 11Street, Nol Universe) should prepare for staggered term updates and may need to adjust operational practices across multiple seller dashboards simultaneously.",{"title":30,"answer":31,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"How does this ruling impact cross-border sellers accessing South Korea's market?","Cross-border sellers using these platforms to reach South Korea's $100B+ e-commerce market will face stricter accountability for product authenticity, customer data protection, and transaction disputes. The ruling establishes that platforms cannot contractually shield sellers from liability for data breaches or product-related damages. International sellers must now ensure compliance with South Korea's personal data protection law, which requires proving absence of negligence to avoid liability. This increases operational costs for cross-border sellers through enhanced data security, quality control documentation, and customer communication protocols. The ruling also signals that other Asia-Pacific regulators (Japan, Singapore, Taiwan) are likely to adopt similar standards, creating a regional compliance wave through 2025-2026.",{"title":33,"answer":34,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"How will this ruling affect platform competition and seller choice in South Korea?","The ruling levels the competitive playing field by eliminating platforms' ability to use unfair liability exemptions as a competitive advantage. **SSG.com**, which had no data breach liability exemptions, gains credibility as a more consumer-friendly platform. Sellers may shift toward platforms with clearer, fairer terms—potentially benefiting SSG.com and Naver if they implement transparent policies quickly. The ruling could accelerate consolidation, with smaller platforms (11Street, Nol Universe) facing higher compliance costs and potentially exiting the market. Coupang, despite eight violations, maintains market dominance due to its logistics infrastructure and customer base, but faces pressure to rebuild consumer trust post-data breach. For sellers, the ruling creates opportunity to negotiate better terms with platforms competing on fairness rather than liability exemptions. Cross-border sellers may diversify across multiple platforms to reduce dependency on any single marketplace's terms.",{"title":36,"answer":37,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What precedent does this ruling set for e-commerce regulation in Asia-Pacific?","South Korea's FTC enforcement establishes a regional precedent for stricter platform accountability, signaling that Asia-Pacific regulators will scrutinize liability-dodging clauses and data protection practices. Japan's Fair Trade Commission, Singapore's Competition and Consumer Commission, and Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission are likely to conduct similar reviews of platform terms. This creates a compliance wave through 2025-2026, with sellers potentially facing harmonized accountability standards across major Asia-Pacific markets. The ruling also influences EU and US regulatory discussions—the FTC's focus on data breach liability aligns with GDPR principles and emerging US state privacy laws. Sellers should expect similar enforcement actions in other regions, making it prudent to adopt best-practice terms of service and data protection policies now rather than waiting for market-specific enforcement. The precedent also strengthens seller negotiating power, as platforms face regulatory pressure to offer fairer terms.",[39],{"id":40,"title":41,"source":42,"logo":11,"time":43},809642,"Coupang, 6 other shopping platforms ordered to rewrite terms of service over liability-dodging","https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/2026-04-27/national/socialAffairs/Coupang-6-other-shopping-platforms-ordered-to-rewrite-terms-of-service-over-liabilitydodging/2578778","6H AGO","#4b14abff","#4b14ab4d",1777311044720]