South Korea

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

South Korea’s AI Foundation Model Initiative Advances Amid Recognition, Controversy and Policy Reform
Jan. 5, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

South Korea’s effort to establish independent AI foundation models now faces recognition, controversy and policy reforms.

**The Independent AI Foundation Model Project achieved its first major milestone when all five domestic entrants—Naver, SK Telecom, NC AI, LG AI Research and Upstage—landed on Epoch AI’s “Notable AI Models” list.**
Their inclusion raised Korea’s representation from three entries last year, all from LG AI Research, to eight, reflecting rapid national progress in AI capabilities.

**Project teams selected in August 2025 spent four months developing the five models—HyperCLOVA X Seed 32B Sync (Naver), A.X K1 (SK Telecom), VAETKI (NC AI), K-EXAONE (LG AI Research) and Solara Open 100B (Upstage)—before releasing them as open-source packages on Hugging Face at the end of 2025 to foster ecosystem engagement.**
As of January 2, 2026, Naver’s HyperCLOVA X 32B leads downloads with over 15,000.

**Allegations surfaced that Upstage’s Solara Open 100B borrowed from Zhipu AI’s GLM-4.5-Air, but Upstage rebutted this during a public technical verification session, arguing that shared architectural elements in open-source frameworks do not equate to unauthorized derivation.**
Saionic AI’s CEO Go Seok-hyun acknowledged methodological limitations in his claim, apologized for the confusion and called for clear academic and technical standards to define sovereign, independent AI.

**In response, the Ministry of Science and ICT will overhaul its AI project evaluations to emphasize development traceability alongside performance.**
Teams must submit final models and intermediate training checkpoints so that the Korea Testing Laboratory of Information and Communication Technology (TTA) and an expert committee can track development histories and detect any externally sourced weights. Evaluations begin in early January 2026 with one team eliminated by mid-month, and they will recur semi-annually through 2027 until two finalists emerge.

**Industry experts view the controversy and revised evaluation process as an opportunity to establish verification standards for model independence, such as permissible use of open-source architectures, thresholds for structural similarity and guidelines for component reuse like tokenizers.**
By shifting accountability toward development history rather than solely assessing end-product performance, the government’s approach reflects growing maturity in South Korea’s AI ecosystem.

**Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Science and ICT Bae Kyung-hoon pointed to roughly 90 onsite experts and journalists and 2,000 online participants at the public verification event as proof of the ecosystem’s transparency and self-correcting capacity.**
He stressed the need for ongoing public technical debates and announced that evaluations for the five elite teams will run from early January to January 15. Bae affirmed the government’s commitment to refining definitions and verification protocols for independent AI foundation models as a fair supporter of the sector.
President Lee’s State Visit to China Begins Amid Push for Enhanced Security, Economic, and Cultural Ties
Jan. 5, 2026 | Geopolitics & Defense

President Lee Jae-Myung travels to Beijing for a four-day state visit aimed at strengthening security, economic, and cultural ties between South Korea and China.

**President Lee departed for Beijing on January 4, 2026, marking the first visit by a South Korean president to China since 2019 and his first trip to China after assuming office in June 2025.**
Invited by President Xi Jinping, Lee will attend a bilateral summit in Beijing on January 5, where Xi will host an official welcoming ceremony, hold discussion talks, sign memoranda of understanding and host a state banquet. The two leaders last met at the APEC summit in Gyeongju in November 2025.

**Lee will make denuclearization and the security of the Korean Peninsula central to his discussions, urging China to play a constructive role in advancing denuclearization and improving inter-Korean relations.**
National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac has pointed to Beijing’s capacity to influence North Korean behavior and contribute to regional peace and stability.

**Economic cooperation forms another pillar of Lee’s agenda.**
He will lead a large Korean business delegation to the Korea-China Economic Forum in Beijing, seeking expanded collaboration in artificial intelligence, green energy, supply-chain resilience, tourism, medical care, content industries and infrastructure. The two sides plan to sign more than ten memoranda of understanding and work toward a more balanced, horizontal economic partnership.

**Cultural exchanges and regional tensions will also feature prominently.**
Seoul will press for relief from China’s informal restrictions on South Korean content imposed after the deployment of a US missile defense system in 2016 and 2017. In a recent interview, Lee reaffirmed South Korea’s commitment to the One-China principle amid heightened tensions following China’s military exercises near Taiwan. The visit will also address maritime disputes caused by China’s construction of steel structures in the overlapping Yellow Sea provisional measures zone, with working-level talks already in progress.

**On January 6, Lee will meet Premier Li Qiang and Zhao Leji, chairman of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee.**
He will then travel to Shanghai to honor the 100th anniversary of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea and commemorate independence leader Kim Gu’s 150th birth anniversary. In Shanghai, Lee will attend the Korea-China Venture Startup Summit with entrepreneurs from both countries and meet local officials to discuss subnational exchanges.

**The Blue House expects this visit to rebuild political trust, restore the Korea-China strategic cooperative partnership and establish new cooperation models in supply chains, cultural content and peace initiatives on the Korean Peninsula.**

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Jan. 5, 2026


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Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.

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우주항공청, K-스페이스 R&ampD에 9,495억 원 투자

Aerospace Agency Invests 949.5 Billion Won in K-Space R&D

ZD Net Korea | Local Language | News | Jan. 5, 2026 | UndeterminedTech Development/Adoption

The Aerospace Agency’s 2026 budget allocates a total of 1 trillion 120.1 billion won, with 949.5 billion won dedicated to research and development (R&D) across 53 projects. Basic expenses and non-R&D projects account for 170.6 billion won. The comprehensive implementation plan prioritizes space transportation, which receives 263.2 billion won despite a reduction of 42.3 billion won from the previous year.

Aerospace policy is the second-largest category, funded at 216.8 billion won, an increase of 5.4 billion won, followed by the satellite sector with 211.2 billion won (+6.0 billion won). The space science exploration sector sees the largest percentage increase of 66.8%, rising to 90.5 billion won. Aviation innovation also receives a boost, increasing by 7.6 billion won to 23.5 billion won.

Specific aerospace policy and industry priorities include funding for research operating expenses and facility support (191.3 billion won), training programs, space hazard response systems, and development of new space risk analysis technologies. New investments target talent development for space technology innovation, establishment of a space industry cluster, and construction of a test facility for private-sector space launch vehicle engines.

The Aerospace Mission Headquarters will promote private sector development of high-performance upper-stage engines and high-altitude transport vehicles. Major allocations include 125.3 billion won for Korea-type launch vehicle advancements, 120.4 billion won for next-generation launch vehicles, and 12.7 billion won for key aerospace technologies. New projects include orbital transport vehicle flight model development (3.0 billion won).

Satellite R&D funding emphasizes advanced space object control technologies, micro-satellite systems, geostationary communications satellites, the Korea Positioning System, and next-generation imaging radar. Additional projects focus on meteorological and space weather satellites, low-Earth-orbit satellite communications, and ultra-high-resolution optical satellites.

Lunar exploration efforts include 80.9 billion won for the Lunar Exploration Phase 2 lander development, international collaboration on private lunar lander payloads, and construction of a large international radio telescope. New initiatives also support small unmanned manufacturing platforms and commercialization of space technologies.

In aviation, the agency focuses on eco-friendly and intelligent aircraft technologies, as well as future air mobility. Budgets cover drone-robot linked urban cargo delivery, development of superalloy materials for aero-engines, stratospheric drone demonstration, electrified aircraft engine technologies, AI safety assurance for aviation, and sustainable aircraft materials.

Through these detailed project investments, the Aerospace Agency aims to achieve technological self-reliance, strengthen industrial competitiveness, and facilitate the transition to a private-sector-led space economy.

연 18.9% '쿠팡 판매자 성장대출', 금감원 검사 전환 검토

Review of Financial Supervisory Service Inspection Switch for Coupang Seller Growth Loans at Annual 18.9% Interest Rate

ET News | Local Language | News | Jan. 5, 2026 | Regulatory Enforcement Actions

The Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) is considering upgrading its on-site inspection to a formal examination of Coupang Financial’s “Coupang Seller Growth Loan,” which charges a maximum annual interest rate of 18.9% to marketplace sellers. The review focuses on whether the loan product’s structure and risk disclosures were appropriate, amid concerns about consumer protection violations rather than the interest rate itself, which is within the legal 20% cap. A key issue under scrutiny is the collateral arrangement, where in the event of default, Coupang Financial can claim sellers’ settlement proceeds from Coupang and Coupang Pay directly.

The loan agreement allows repayment amounts based on a contractual ratio of up to 20% of sales per settlement cycle, with a minimum repayment requirement every three months. If sellers fail to meet these conditions, the lender can recover outstanding amounts by using sellers’ settlement claims as collateral. Financial authorities are investigating whether sellers were adequately informed about the risks and the collateralized nature of the product, and whether it was misleadingly presented as an unsecured personal loan.

Coupang argues the loan product supports "mutual growth," targeting small and medium-sized merchants and those with low credit who struggle to access traditional financing. It emphasizes that repayments are linked to sales levels, allowing flexibility to avoid delinquencies even when sales decrease. Meanwhile, the FSS has extended its on-site inspection of Coupang Pay by one week due to a personal information leak and may also escalate that to a formal examination if violations are found.

The Coupang case highlights increasing financial risks related to big tech companies, prompting discussions on potential regulatory measures for large retail platforms. FSS Governor Lee Chan-jin announced intentions to collaborate with relevant agencies on institutional improvements and a supervisory framework for such platforms akin to that applied to financial institutions.

North Korea launches ballistic missile as President Lee departs for China

Joongang Ilbo | English | News | Jan. 5, 2026 | North Korea

North Korea fired a ballistic missile into the East Sea on Sunday morning, marking its first ballistic missile launch of 2026 and the first since a short-range missile was fired on November 7, 2025. The launch was confirmed by South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).

The missile launch coincided with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung's departure for a four-day state visit to China, invited by Chinese President Xi Jinping. The upcoming Seoul-Beijing summit is expected to address North Korea's denuclearization.

The launch occurred shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump announced the military ousting of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Saturday.

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