South Korea fines mobile carriers $34m for exaggerating 5G speeds

KFTC said that SK Telecom is one of the three firms that had unfairly advertised that they were the fastest relative to their competitors. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

SEOUL - South Korea’s antitrust regulator said that it had imposed a total of 33.6 billion won (S$34 million) in fines on three domestic mobile carriers for exaggerating their 5G network speeds.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) said the three South Korean firms – SK Telecom, KT Corp and LG Uplus Corp – had also unfairly advertised that they were the fastest relative to their competitors.

“The three telco companies advertised that consumers could use target 5G network speeds, which cannot be achieved in (a) real-life environment… companies advertised that their 5G network speed was faster than competitors without evidence,” the KFTC said in a statement.

In support of ongoing civil lawsuits filed by consumers, the advertisements released by the three mobile carriers have been presented by the regulator to a local court.

SK Telecom and KT Corp declined to comment. A spokesman at LG Uplus said that the company is reviewing the sanctions.

The KFTC imposed a fine of 16.8 billion won on SK Telecom, 13.9 billion won on KT and 2.8 billion won on LG Uplus.

There were 30.76 million 5G network users in South Korea in June, accounting for about 38 per cent of the total 80.23 million mobile subscriptions in the country, according to data from the Ministry of Science and ICT. REUTERS

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