South
Korea is one of the world's most digitally advanced countries. It has
ubiquitous broadband, running at speeds that many Americans can only
envy. Its Internet is also one of the most quirky in the world.
A
curfew restricts school-age children from playing online games at
night; adults wanting to do so need to provide their resident
registration numbers to prove that they are of age.
Until
last year, commenters on the Web were legally required to use their
real names. A simple Web search in Korean can be a fruitless experience,
because the operators of many sites, including some government
ministries, bar search engines from indexing their pages.
Travelers
who want to go from Gimpo International Airport to the Gangnam
neighborhood of Seoul cannot rely on Google Maps. Google Maps can
provide directions only for public transport, not for driving, to any
place in Korea. Anyone crazy enough to try the journey on bicycle or on
foot, directions for which Google Maps provides elsewhere, will be
similarly stymied.
The highly regulated
Internet comes as a surprise to many people, Koreans included, because
South Korea is a strong democracy with a vibrant economy seemingly ready
for the digital information age. South Koreans were early adopters of
Internet games and smartphones. It has world-beating electronics
companies like Samsung and LG. But here the Internet is just different.
The
Korean government has its reasons, most of them well-intentioned. The
curfew, for example, was put in place two years ago to deal with
concerns about game addiction among teenagers.
South
Korean security restrictions that were put in place more than half a
century ago after the Korean War limit Google's maps, the company says.
The export of map data is barred, ostensibly to prevent it from falling
into the hands of South Korea's foe to the north, across the world's
most heavily fortified border. Google and other foreign Internet
companies say the rule also prevents them from providing online mapping
services, like navigation, that travelers have come to rely on in much
of the rest of the world.
The Korea
Communications Standards Commission, a regulatory panel, blocks material
on the Web that it deems objectionable. This can include pornography,
the production of which is technically illegal in South Korea.
"It's
ironic, in a country that is widely recognized for its advanced digital
infrastructure, that there are so many restrictions on the Internet in
Korea," said Kim Keechang, a professor at Korea University who is
writing a book on Internet regulation in South Korea.
Foreign
Internet companies say the country's rules prevent them from competing
against domestic rivals because they cannot provide the same services
they do elsewhere. South Korea is one of the few major markets where
Google is not the leading search engine. A South Korean rival, Naver,
has the most users.
But domestic criticism of
the Korean approach to Internet regulation is growing. Civil liberties
advocates successfully challenged the rule requiring users of Internet
discussion groups to provide their real names, verified by a national
identity registration system. A court last year struck down the measure,
which was introduced in 2007 to try to curb online bullying after a
rash of suicides.
Now the government of
President Park Geun-hye is moving to ease some of the Internet
regulations that previous administrations put in place. Park wants to
encourage creativity in the South Korean high-technology industry, which
is very good at developing hardware like smartphones and television
sets but not as good at exporting software and services. Critics say the
different rules that South Korean companies have to play by at home and
abroad limit their ability to think in a worldly fashion.
In
September, the government promised to ease the restrictions on online
mapping services. The National Geographic Information Institute, part of
the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, said it would make
an official English-language digital map available to Internet
companies, beginning this month for companies based in South Korea. The
ministry said it was changing its policy to help foreign Internet
companies and to clear up uncertainties over Korean place names.
The
move comes at the same time as a new flare-up in a longstanding dispute
over a group of islets between South Korea and Japan that are known
variously as the Dokdo in Korea, the Takeshima in Japan and the
Liancourt Rocks in some other places. (The islands are either in the Sea
of Japan or the East Sea, which is another naming dispute.) For Google
and other foreign companies, there is a hitch. They will be permitted to
use the map as of next year, on a case-by-case basis. Now, Google
adapts its English-language maps of South Korea from the government's
Korean-language maps. Google is permitted to provide directions using
public transit systems like the Seoul subway, because train and bus
routes and schedules are available through public records.
But
Google says other sophisticated map enhancements, like driving
directions, traffic information, three-dimensional modeling of cities
and indoor floor plans of airports and shopping centers, require the
company to process the data at its servers outside South Korea. This
would constitute an export of the map data, which has been forbidden
until now.
Google says the policy change
announced by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport does not
go far enough. That is because the scale of the new official,
English-language map is limited to 1:25,000, which the company says is
insufficient to provide details that Google Maps users take for granted
elsewhere.
"Maps at the lower resolution don't
have accurate enough information to guide people and cars through
intersections, sidewalks, bike lanes, pedestrian overpasses and many
points of interest," the company said in a statement.
Google
maintains that the rules are unfair because domestic Internet companies
like Naver are able to provide online navigation and other mapping
services, even to users outside the country. That is because Naver's
servers are housed in South Korea. For many foreign visitors, though,
Naver's maps are of limited use, because they are available only in
Korean.
"We just think any services should be
carried out within the framework of the law," Google said. "The same
laws should apply to all providers of Web map services, domestic or
foreign."
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