South Korea fines matchmaking agency over leak of sensitive user data


FILE PHOTO: A groom puts a wedding ring on his bride's finger during a wedding ceremony at a budget wedding hall at the National Library of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, May 16, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

SEOUL, April 23 (Reuters) - South Korea's data protection agency said on Thursday it ⁠has fined a matchmaking service over the leak of its members' sensitive ‌personal information, including their weight, blood type and whether they were previously married.

The Personal Information Protection Commission said in a statement the company, Duo, failed to implement adequate measures to safeguard their membership database ​and was slow to take action after its ⁠system was hacked last year.

It ordered ⁠Duo to pay a 1.21 billion won ($815,400) fine, take corrective action to improve how ⁠it ‌handles personal data and to fully disclose details of the incident.

Hackers gained unauthorised access to the company database in January last year and downloaded ⁠private personal information of more than 420,000 current and former ​members. The data also ‌included phone numbers, addresses, schools graduated from and workplaces, it said.

The commission ⁠said Duo also ​violated regulations on the collection and storage of personal data, such as citizenship ID numbers and passwords, and failed to meet a requirement to delete the information of nearly 300,000 ⁠members gathered more than five years ago.

Duo is ​one of South Korea's best-known matchmaking services, in a country where many have long relied on such services in some form or other to find partners.

The company said in a ⁠statement it respected the agency's findings and "deeply regrets that we failed to adequately protect our members’ personal data."

It said the breach resulted from a "hacking attack that was extremely difficult to detect or prevent."

Duo says on its website its services have led ​to more than 53,000 weddings and seven couples tying ⁠the knot on average every day. It had 36,000 members as of this week, the ​website said.

A number of South Korean companies and ‌online platforms have suffered breaches of customer data ​as a result of hacking or staff misconduct, prompting a government crackdown following a public outcry.

($1 = 1,483.9000 won)

(Reporting by Jack KimEditing by Ed Davies)

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