OpenNet (organization)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Open Net (Korean: 오픈넷) is a non-governmental organization which aims for the freedom and openness of South Korea's internet.[1] It was approved by Seoul Radiowave Management Office (Korean: 서울전파관리소) on 7 March 2013.[2]

FormationFebruary 4, 2013; 13 years ago (2013-02-04)
TypeNGO
PurposeFocus on freedom, openness, and sharing on internet of South Korea.
HeadquartersGangnam, Seoul
Quick facts Formation, Type ...
Open Net
오픈넷
FormationFebruary 4, 2013; 13 years ago (2013-02-04)
TypeNGO
PurposeFocus on freedom, openness, and sharing on internet of South Korea.
HeadquartersGangnam, Seoul
Location
Region served
South Korea
Official language
Korean
Key people
Kim Keechang(Korean: 김기창), Park Kyung-sin (Korean: 박경신), Nam Heesob(Korean: 남희섭), Jeon Eung-hui (Korean: 전응휘), Woo Jisuk(Korean: 우지숙), Kang Jung Soo(Korean: 강정수), Kim Borami (Korean: 김보라미)
Main organ
board of directors
Staff3
Websitehttp://opennet.or.kr, opennetkorea.org
Close
Kim Keechang, one of Founders in 2013

Activities

Open Net works on major projects grouped under the banners such as "Freedom of Speech", "Intellectual Property", "Privacy", "Network neutrality", "Open Government", and "Innovation and Regulations".

On July 31, 2013, Open Net submitted a Constitutional complaint about how the South Korean government forces minors to verify his or her identity.[3] In August 2013, Open Net and Aladdin Communications started a non-Active X payment system,[4] however, card companies refused to accept. Open Net submitted a preliminary injunction to accept it.[5][6] On January 28, 2014, OpenNet filed a lawsuit against the Korea Communications Standards Commission's (Korean: 대한민국 방송통신심의위원회) internet censorship by blocking access to Grooveshark.[7][8] On 17 January 2014, OpenNet accepts donations via Bitcoin.[9] OpenNet is the first Korean NGO who accepts Bitcoin donation.[10]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI