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Shin Sohyun
1842025.09.18
Internationally, countries have established comprehensive legal frameworks to govern both foreign information collection and foreign interference, embedding safeguards against abuse and ensuring democratic oversight. By contrast, South Korea’s current Regulation on Cybersecurity Services (Article 6-2) allows the National Intelligence Service (NIS) to conduct preemptive overseas tracking and neutralization without sufficient legal safeguards or statutory authority, making it unconstitutional under Article 37(2) of the Constitution. Moreover, South Korea lacks a clear legal framework to address foreign interference via online manipulation, raising risks of conflating foreign campaigns with domestic misconduct. To close these gaps in (1) foreign information collection, South Korea must reinforce provisions such as Article 6-2 of the current Regulations on Cybersecurity Services and incorporate them into the higher-level National Intelligence Service Act as the legal basis. In (2) foreign interference, a new legislation should be enacted, which is consistent with the approach of similarly situated countries.
South Korea’s 2024 National Cybersecurity Strategy needs an adequate review of the previous strategy and a process for gathering stakeholder input during its revision. The Harvard Belfer Center’s assessment also ranked Korea the lowest among seven countries—the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Japan, Singapore, and the Republic of Korea—, pointing out insufficient specificity and a lack of concrete policy proposals. In particular, the exclusion of key actors such as industry, civil society, and local governments, as well as weak accountability and performance evaluation, were highlighted as shortcomings. Under the Lee Jae-myung administration, the new National Cybersecurity Strategy should be more comprehensive and concrete by incorporating the contents developed by the National Cybersecurity Basic Plan.
This article is an English Summary of Asan Issue Brief (2025-27).
('이재명 정부의 사이버 안보 법·전략에 대한 제언’)
Research Fellow
Dr. Shin Sohyun is a research fellow in the Centre for Foreign Policy and National Security at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies. Her research mainly focuses on the international norm change and progress in the new spaces: cyberspace and outer space following the development of emerging technologies such as ICT, AI, space technology and quantum computing, etc. Dr. Shin has interests in interdisciplinary and socio-legal research combining new technologies and law and policy relating to armed conflict, military operations, weapons, cyber espionage and intelligence as well as disaster, environment and human rights. She was the founding member of Sejong Institute Cybersecurity Centre(2020-2022) and organised ‘Cybersecurity Forum’. She worked as a research fellow of Korea University Institute of Cyber Security & Privacy. Dr. Shin published “The Regulation of State’s Hostile Disinformation Operations in Cyberspace”, “Space Security and International Law”, and “Cyber Deterrence and US Defence Forward Strategy in International Law”, etc.
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