Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/south-korea

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Korea Communications Standards Commission

Government agency

Korea Communications Standards Commission

Summary

Government agency

FieldValue
nameKorea Communications Standards Commission
native_name_a방송통신심의위원회
typecommission
sealEmblem of the Korea Communications Standards Commission.svg
formed
preceding1Information and Communication Ethics Committee
preceding2Korea Broadcasting Commission
superseding2
jurisdictionSouth Korea
headquartersYangcheon District, Seoul
coordinates
minister2_pfo
deputyminister2_pfo
chief1_nameKang, Sang-Hyun
chief1_positionChairman
chief2_position
child2_agency
keydocument1
website
embed{{infobox Korean name/auto
hangul^방송_통신_심의_위원회
hanja放送通信審議委員會
childyes

The Korea Communications Standards Commission () is an institution of the South Korean government that regulates communications including film, television, radio, and internet.

At its formation in 2008, the KCSC replaced an earlier body, the Information and Communication Ethics Committee.

In September 2011, the KCSC decided to open up its three discussion committees to the public.

TV program ratings

@@@@@@@@@@ | IMPORTANT NOTE: Please DO NOT add any comparisons to other countries' | | ratings systems (i.e., adding, "this rating is similar to X-country's | | rating", etc.), or examples of television programs. We do not need any | | comprehensive or all-inclusive lists of other ratings systems from | | other countries, or of every single TV show. This is NOT a place to | | promote your country's system, or your favorite television program. Any| | edits doing so - regardless of having a source or not - are a violation| | of WP:TRIVIA and will be reverted. Repeat violators will be blocked. | | Thank you for your cooperation. | @@@@@@@@@@

The South Korean television rating system has been in force since 2000, and it started with only four classifications which are All, 7, 13, and 18. In February 2001, all programs except domestic dramas (which had been enforced since November 2002) are required to have a rating. In 2007, the 13 rating was changed into 12 and a new rating, 15, was introduced. In 2010, 18 was raised to 19. Most programs have to be rated, except the "exempt" rating below. Even if it qualifies for being exempt, a broadcaster may apply a rating.

Example of Korean TV rating icons.
  • [[File:Republic Of Korea Broadcasting-TV Rating System(ALL).svg|30px|Republic_Of_Korea_Broadcasting-TV_Rating_System(ALL).svg]] ** All (모든 연령 시청가, Mo-deun yeon-ryeong si-cheong-ga)**: This rating is for programming that is appropriate for all ages. Television programs with this rating may contain some violence and/or some mild language. No adult content is allowed.
  • [[File:Republic Of Korea Broadcasting-TV Rating System(7).svg|30px|Republic_Of_Korea_Broadcasting-TV_Rating_System(7).svg]] 7 (7세 이상 시청가, chil-se ii-sang si-cheong-ga): Children under 7 are prohibited from watching this program/film. Children aged 7–8 may watch this program/film, but must be accompanied by an adult. Television programs with this rating can contain mild violence, mild language and few romance.
  • [[File:Republic Of Korea Broadcasting-TV Rating System(12).svg|30px|Republic_Of_Korea_Broadcasting-TV_Rating_System(12).svg]] 12 (12세 이상 시청가, sib-i-se i-sang si-cheong-ga): Children under 12 are prohibited from watching this program/film. Television programs with this rating may contain horror, some fantasy violence, some sexual content, little use of strong language, mild blood, and/or mild suggestive themes.
  • [[File:Republic Of Korea Broadcasting-TV Rating System(15).svg|30px|Republic_Of_Korea_Broadcasting-TV_Rating_System(15).svg]] 15 (15세 이상 시청가, sib-o-se i-sang si-cheong-ga): Children under 15 are prohibited from watching this program/film. TV shows with this rating may contain use of alcohol, more sexual content, mild violence or little strong violence, major blood or gore, and/or suggestive themes.
  • [[File:Republic Of Korea Broadcasting-TV Rating System(19).svg|30px|Republic_Of_Korea_Broadcasting-TV_Rating_System(19).svg]] 19 (19세 이상 시청가, sip-gu-se i-sang si-cheong-ga): Children under 19 are prohibited from watching this program/film. 19-rated programming is banned from airing during the hours of 7:00AM to 9:00AM, and 1:00PM to 10:00PM. Programs that receive this rating will almost certainly have adult themes, sexual situations, strong language and disturbing scenes of violence.
  • Exempt (no icon or name): This rating is only for knowledge based game shows; lifestyle shows; documentary shows; news; current topic discussion shows; education/culture shows; sports that excludes MMA or other violent sports; and other programs that the Korea Communications Standards Commission recognizes. Disclaimer or rating icons are not needed.

Rating icons may be transparent, and can be positioned either on the upper-left or upper-right corner of the screen. The icon has a size of at least 1/20 of the screen, and has black writing on a yellow circle with a white outline. These icons are shown for 30 seconds when the program starts, and are shown again every 10 minutes, and when the program resumes after commercial breaks. This does not apply to 19-rated programs, where the icon must be visible throughout the entire program. These regulations do not apply to the "All" rating, as it does not have an icon.

A rating disclaimer is displayed on the start of the program for five seconds explaining "This program is prohibited for children under the age of X, so parental accompaniment is required"(이 프로그램은 X세 미만의 어린이/청소년이 시청하기에 부적절하므로 보호자의 시청지도가 필요한 프로그램입니다, I peu-ro-geu-raem eun "X: se-mi-man ui eo rin-i/cheong-so nyeon-i si cheong hagi e bu-jeok jeol ha-meu robo hoja ui si cheong-ji doga pir-yo han peu-ro-geu-raem ipnida) for 7, 12, and 15 ratings. "All" and "19" ratings have a different disclaimer, which say "This program is suitable for all ages" (이 프로그램은 모든 연령의 시청자가 시청할 수 있는 프로그램입니다) and "This program is prohibited for children under the age of 19" (이 프로그램은 19세 미만의 청소년이 시청하기에 부적절한 프로그램입니다) respectively.

These ratings are used by all South Korean television broadcasters. Despite being intended for viewing within the country, KBS World also uses these ratings.

South Korean television ratings do not include content descriptors or advisories as they do in other nations. The ratings are therefore used in a broader sense.

Censorship

From 2004 to some time before 2013, the KCSC has required Korean citizens to enter government issued ID numbers in order to post political comments online.

During the presidency of Lee Myung-bak the KCSC was criticized for a perceived heavy bias in favor of the Lee Myung-bak government. On August 3, 2008, KCSC requested the internet portal, Daum, to delete posts and comments negative towards Lee Myung-bak during the heyday of the anti-beef imports.

Some lay members of the National Assembly protested against KCSC's censorship-like decision to monitor content in social network services and mobile applications.

Moon Yong-sik (문용식) CEO of the South Korean internet contents company, Nowcom, has expressed concerns about the KCSC becoming a tool to monitor and to censor online content that expresses anti-government and anti-big business messages.

The KCSC had considered penalizing SBS and MBC for showing Twitter messages that are critical against President Lee and his government.

SNS

The KCSC planned to set up a regulatory office dedicated to supervising posts on SNS outlets. However, the Constitutional Court of Korea ruled against KCSC's decision to regulate voting-related posts on SNS outlets.

Criticism

  • Fans of South Korea's popular variety show, Infinite Challenge criticized the KCSC for pointing out negative remarks towards the show regarding its usage of words based on outdated standards.

References

References

  1. Jillian York and Rainey Reitman. (September 6, 2011). "In South Korea, the Only Thing Worse Than Online Censorship is Secret Online Censorship". Electronic Frontier Foundation.
  2. Byeong-gyu (병규). Kim (김). (2011-09-12). link. [[Yonhap News Agency]]
  3. Kim, Su-jin. (2009-11-10). "TV 드라마의 등급 분류 기준은?". 매일경제.
  4. (10 February 2014). "Why South Korea is really an internet dinosaur". [[The Economist]].
  5. Jeong-seop (정섭). Kim (김). (2008-05-08). link. [[Kyunghyang Shinmun]]
  6. Sohn (손), Bong-seok (봉석). (2011-10-20). "방송통신위 SNS 심의 추진에 여야 모두 비판". [[Kyunghyang Shinmun]].
  7. Hyeong-seok (형석). Cha (차). (2011-06-10). link. SisaInLive
  8. Ji-eun (지은). Chae (채). (2011-07-07). link. [[Hankook Ilbo]]
  9. Kim, Rahn. (2011-12-01). "SNS faces tighter scrutiny". [[The Korea Times]].
  10. Choi, He-suk. (2011-12-29). "Court rules against ban on SNS in elections". [[The Korea Herald]].
  11. Ji-yeong (지영). Im (임). (2011-11-18). link. SisInLive
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Korea Communications Standards Commission — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report