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18:09LG Electronics CEO offers to pay $1m salary to top AI talents
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17:43Hybe-Ador CEO conflict gets messier
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17:36[Contribution] Korea should prioritize innovation, not misguided platform regulation
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17:13Battery makers ramp up efforts to diversify graphite supply chain
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17:06Yoon names new military manpower chief
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17:05Popular online game soundtracks recreated as traditional music
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15:52[LLG] Unseen inheritance: Trauma of transnational adoption 'trickles down' to adoptees' children
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15:38Samsung Electronics microwave tops European market
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15:37[Photo News] Empowering jobseekers
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15:33Court's ruling set to shape path of medical school expansion
Social Affairs
Controversy rekindles over when to name criminals
Concerns surrounding the disclosure of the personal information of convicted criminals and those suspected of having committed crimes have been mounting in South Korea, sparked by the recent revival of a name-and-shame website known as "Digital Prison," around four years after it was shut down by South Korean authorities. The debate was triggered by the unauthorized release of the personal details of a 25-year-old man surnamed Choi, who is accused of stabbing his girlfriend to death