Regarding the Coupang personal information leak, it appears there have been no cases so far in which the leaked information was actually used to commit crimes, causing secondary damage.
The Korean National Police Agency National Office of Investigation (NOI) said on the 5th that there was no increase or decrease trend in smishing or voice phishing around June 24, when customer information was first leaked. This was based on an analysis of cases reported to the integrated response unit for telecommunications financial fraud and the cybercrime reporting system.
It also said that an analysis of about 22,000 smishing and voice phishing cases reported from June 24 to the 4th of this month found no cases in which information types leaked from Coupang—such as delivery address information and order information—were exploited beyond preexisting criminal methods.
The National Office of Investigation (NOI) also conducted a full review of about 116,000 crimes during the same period, including home invasions, break-in robberies and thefts, and stalking, but found no cases related to Coupang.
National Office of Investigation (NOI) Commissioner Park Seong-ju said, "We will closely verify the possibility of distribution of Coupang personal information to prevent leaked information from seeping into the criminal ecosystem," adding, "We will continue to check for any secondary damage."