The post South Korea Pushes No-Fault Liability After Upbit Hack appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. South Korean regulators are pushing strict no-fault liability rules on cryptocurrency exchanges, following a $28 million hacking incident at Upbit, the nation’s largest exchange. The Financial Services Commission will include these measures in its subsequent legislation for virtual assets. Sponsored Sponsored TradFi Regulation Applies As Current One Falls Short No-fault liability is a legal principle requiring compensation without proving negligence or wrongful conduct. Victims receive quick, predictable payouts without the burden of proving who was at fault. This approach is commonly applied to motor vehicle accidents and hazardous industrial activities. Under proposed rules, exchanges must compensate users for losses from hacking or system failures. Liability applies regardless of the company’s fault, unless users acted with gross negligence. This mirrors the country’s regulations governing traditional financial institutions under the Electronic Financial Transactions Act. Currently, crypto exchanges fall outside the Act’s jurisdiction. This creates a regulatory blind spot, leaving investors without legal protection. The recent Upbit incident highlighted this vulnerability, sparking urgent calls for reform. Governor Lee Chan-jin of the Financial Supervisory Service acknowledged the gap at a recent press conference. He stated that system security is the lifeline of virtual asset markets. Phase 2 legislation will significantly strengthen these protections. Data reveals the full scope of the problem. Between 2023 and September 2025, five major exchanges reported 20 IT incidents. Over 900 users suffered combined damages exceeding $29 million. Upbit alone accounted for six incidents affecting 616 users. Bithumb reported four incidents impacting 326 users. Coinone experienced three incidents, affecting 47 users. Sponsored Sponsored Upbit Discloses Regulatory Weakness The Upbit breach exposed major weaknesses in Korea’s crypto oversight framework. One hundred billion coins were transferred out in less than an hour, highlighting how rapidly growing digital asset markets can experience massive losses in a very short time when attacks occur.​ According… The post South Korea Pushes No-Fault Liability After Upbit Hack appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. South Korean regulators are pushing strict no-fault liability rules on cryptocurrency exchanges, following a $28 million hacking incident at Upbit, the nation’s largest exchange. The Financial Services Commission will include these measures in its subsequent legislation for virtual assets. Sponsored Sponsored TradFi Regulation Applies As Current One Falls Short No-fault liability is a legal principle requiring compensation without proving negligence or wrongful conduct. Victims receive quick, predictable payouts without the burden of proving who was at fault. This approach is commonly applied to motor vehicle accidents and hazardous industrial activities. Under proposed rules, exchanges must compensate users for losses from hacking or system failures. Liability applies regardless of the company’s fault, unless users acted with gross negligence. This mirrors the country’s regulations governing traditional financial institutions under the Electronic Financial Transactions Act. Currently, crypto exchanges fall outside the Act’s jurisdiction. This creates a regulatory blind spot, leaving investors without legal protection. The recent Upbit incident highlighted this vulnerability, sparking urgent calls for reform. Governor Lee Chan-jin of the Financial Supervisory Service acknowledged the gap at a recent press conference. He stated that system security is the lifeline of virtual asset markets. Phase 2 legislation will significantly strengthen these protections. Data reveals the full scope of the problem. Between 2023 and September 2025, five major exchanges reported 20 IT incidents. Over 900 users suffered combined damages exceeding $29 million. Upbit alone accounted for six incidents affecting 616 users. Bithumb reported four incidents impacting 326 users. Coinone experienced three incidents, affecting 47 users. Sponsored Sponsored Upbit Discloses Regulatory Weakness The Upbit breach exposed major weaknesses in Korea’s crypto oversight framework. One hundred billion coins were transferred out in less than an hour, highlighting how rapidly growing digital asset markets can experience massive losses in a very short time when attacks occur.​ According…

South Korea Pushes No-Fault Liability After Upbit Hack

2025/12/08 13:26

South Korean regulators are pushing strict no-fault liability rules on cryptocurrency exchanges, following a $28 million hacking incident at Upbit, the nation’s largest exchange.

The Financial Services Commission will include these measures in its subsequent legislation for virtual assets.

Sponsored

Sponsored

TradFi Regulation Applies As Current One Falls Short

No-fault liability is a legal principle requiring compensation without proving negligence or wrongful conduct. Victims receive quick, predictable payouts without the burden of proving who was at fault. This approach is commonly applied to motor vehicle accidents and hazardous industrial activities.

Under proposed rules, exchanges must compensate users for losses from hacking or system failures. Liability applies regardless of the company’s fault, unless users acted with gross negligence. This mirrors the country’s regulations governing traditional financial institutions under the Electronic Financial Transactions Act.

Currently, crypto exchanges fall outside the Act’s jurisdiction. This creates a regulatory blind spot, leaving investors without legal protection. The recent Upbit incident highlighted this vulnerability, sparking urgent calls for reform.

Governor Lee Chan-jin of the Financial Supervisory Service acknowledged the gap at a recent press conference. He stated that system security is the lifeline of virtual asset markets. Phase 2 legislation will significantly strengthen these protections.

Data reveals the full scope of the problem. Between 2023 and September 2025, five major exchanges reported 20 IT incidents. Over 900 users suffered combined damages exceeding $29 million.

Upbit alone accounted for six incidents affecting 616 users. Bithumb reported four incidents impacting 326 users. Coinone experienced three incidents, affecting 47 users.

Sponsored

Sponsored

Upbit Discloses Regulatory Weakness

The Upbit breach exposed major weaknesses in Korea’s crypto oversight framework. One hundred billion coins were transferred out in less than an hour, highlighting how rapidly growing digital asset markets can experience massive losses in a very short time when attacks occur.​

According to data submitted by the FSS to the National Assembly’s National Policy Committee, the Upbit hack occurred from 4:42 am to 5:36 am on November 27 KST, lasting 54 minutes. During this period, 24 types of Solana-based coins totaling about 104,064,700,000 units, worth roughly 44.5 billion won, were sent to external wallets, meaning around 32 million coins, or about 13.7 million won, were siphoned off every second.

Despite significant losses, regulators found no legal basis to penalize exchanges. Under current law, including the Virtual Asset User Protection Act, enacted last year, it is challenging to hold virtual asset service providers directly liable for such hacks, so financial authorities have been reviewing options to close this regulatory gap.

Tougher Standards and Penalties Ahead

New legislation will require crypto businesses to meet the same security standards as traditional financial institutions. Exchanges must maintain adequate staffing, facilities, and robust IT infrastructure. Annual technology plans must be submitted to regulators for review.

Penalties will increase dramatically under the proposed framework. Current fines are capped at roughly $3.5 million. Proposed amendments could allow fines up to 3% of annual revenue.

Industry observers expect swift legislative action. The ruling party has signaled strong support for investor protection measures. Exchanges are now preparing compliance strategies in anticipation of regulatory changes.

Source: https://beincrypto.com/korea-no-fault-liability-on-crypto-exchanges/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns

Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns

The post Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. This morning, Bitcoin Core developers celebrated improved block reconstruction statistics for node operators while conveniently ignoring the reason for these statistics — the downward trend in fees for Bitcoin’s security budget. Reacting with heart emojis and thumbs up to a green chart showing over 80% “successful compact block reconstructions without any requested transactions,” they conveniently omitted red trend lines of the fees that Bitcoin users pay for mining security which powered those green statistics. Block reconstructions occur when a node requests additional information about transactions within a compact block. Although compact blocks allow nodes to quickly relay valid bundles of transactions across the internet, the more frequently that nodes can reconstruct without extra, cumbersome transaction requests from their peers is a positive trend. Because so many nodes switched over in August to relay transactions bidding 0.1 sat/vB across their mempools, nodes now have to request less transaction data to reconstruct blocks containing sub-1 sat/vB transactions. After nodes switched over in August to accept and relay pending transactions bidding less than 1 sat/vB, disparate mempools became harmonized as most nodes had a better view of which transactions would likely join upcoming blocks. As a result, block reconstruction times improved, as nodes needed less information about these sub-1 sat/vB transactions. In July, several miners admitted that user demand for Bitcoin blockspace had persisted at such a low that they were willing to accept transaction fees of just 0.1 satoshi per virtual byte — 90% lower than their prior 1 sat/vB minimum. With so many blocks partially empty, they succumbed to the temptation to accept at least something — even 1 billionth of one bitcoin (BTC) — rather than $0 to fill up some of the excess blockspace. Read more: Bitcoin’s transaction fees have fallen to a multi-year low Green stats for block reconstruction after transaction fees crash After…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 04:07
OpenAI and Partners Launch the Agentic AI Foundation for Open-Source AI Development

OpenAI and Partners Launch the Agentic AI Foundation for Open-Source AI Development

The post OpenAI and Partners Launch the Agentic AI Foundation for Open-Source AI Development appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Peter Zhang Dec 09, 2025 17:56 OpenAI, Anthropic, and Block, supported by tech giants, establish the Agentic AI Foundation under the Linux Foundation to advance open-source agentic AI infrastructure. In a significant move for the artificial intelligence community, OpenAI, in collaboration with Anthropic and Block, has co-founded the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) under the auspices of the Linux Foundation. This initiative, supported by industry leaders such as Google, Microsoft, AWS, Bloomberg, and Cloudflare, aims to develop open-source standards for agentic AI systems as they transition from experimental phases to real-world applications, according to OpenAI. The Role of Open Standards The foundation’s mission is to create a neutral ground for developing interoperable infrastructure for AI agents. As AI technology becomes increasingly integrated into business and consumer environments, the need for standardized protocols grows. Open standards are crucial for ensuring that AI systems can operate safely, efficiently, and across various platforms without the risk of fragmentation. OpenAI’s contribution to the AAIF includes the AGENTS.md, a straightforward open format providing agents with project-specific instructions. This effort is designed to facilitate long-term support and widespread adoption across the AI community. Building the Open Ecosystem Over the past year, OpenAI has been instrumental in developing open-source agentic infrastructure. Contributions include the Agents SDK, Apps SDK, and the Agentic Commerce Protocol, alongside open-source initiatives like the gpt-oss models and Codex CLI. These resources have significantly impacted the development community, demonstrated by their adoption in over two million public pull requests on GitHub. OpenAI’s efforts have laid the groundwork for AAIF by showcasing the potential of open, interoperable infrastructure. The foundation is envisioned as a collaborative space where developers and enterprises can build upon shared standards, ensuring technological advancements benefit the broader community. Donating AGENTS.md The AGENTS.md format, initially…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/10 19:30