Apple Extends iPhone Emergency Location Sharing in South Korea to 30 Minutes

Apple has agreed to extend the duration of its iPhone emergency location-sharing feature for South Korean users from five minutes to thirty minutes. This change was made at the request of the Korea Media and Communications Commission to help emergency responders more accurately locate individuals in need. The agreement was reached after meetings involving multiple Korean government agencies and Apple. Separately, the KMCC chair also met with Google to discuss the implementation of the tech giant's new app store commission policy in South Korea.

Key Points: Apple Improves iPhone Emergency Location for South Korean Users

  • Extended location sharing to 30 min
  • Requested by Korean regulator
  • Aims to help emergency responders
  • Google also discussed app store policy
  • Samsung phones have different mechanism
2 min read

Apple improves iPhone's emergency location-sharing service for S. Korean users

Apple extends emergency location sharing on iPhones in South Korea from 5 to 30 minutes at the government's request to aid first responders.

"We welcome Apple's decision and will continue to work with global companies... to better protect people's lives and safety. - Kim Jong-cheol"

Seoul, April 1

US tech giant Apple has improved an emergency location-sharing feature on iPhones for South Korean users at the request of the Seoul government, officials said on Wednesday.

The expansion of the service's duration, from the previous five minutes to 30 minutes, came at the request of the Korea Media and Communications Commission (KMCC) to better help emergency responders to accurately identify the locations of iPhone users in need of emergency assistance, reports Yonhap news agency.

The agreement was reached after a series of meetings among the KMCC, Apple, the National Police Agency, the National Fire Agency and the Korea Internet & Security Agency.

"Samsung Electronics smartphones do not have such limitations as they operate based on a different mechanism," a KMCC official said, noting Apple decided to offer the extension especially for South Korean users.

"We welcome Apple's decision and will continue to work with global companies and related organizations to improve the quality of location-sharing services to better protect people's lives and safety," KMCC Chair Kim Jong-cheol said in a release.

Meanwhile, the media watchdog chief on Wednesday called on Google to pursue shared growth in South Korea's application ecosystem as the U.S. tech giant moves to revamp its commission policy for its app market.

Kim Jong-cheol, chair of the Korea Media and Communications Commission (KMCC), met with Wilson White, vice president of global affairs at Google, in Gwacheon, just south of Seoul, to discuss areas of cooperation ahead of the implementation of the new commission policy, the watchdog said.

In March, Google vowed to make major changes to its app store policy, including splitting its 30 percent commission into a 15-20 percent service fee and a 5 percent transaction fee while allowing third-party payment options.

"We expect the app market ecosystem to experience tangible changes following Google's positive steps," Kim was quoted as saying during the meeting while asking the U.S. company to implement the new pricing in South Korea earlier than scheduled in December.

Kim also called on Google to come up with measures to promote shared growth across the ecosystem, including small and medium-sized developers. "We ask for Google's continued attention and efforts to establish a fair and sustainable app ecosystem," Kim added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting to see a government successfully negotiating with a tech giant. South Korea's KMCC seems proactive. In India, we often hear about "Digital India," but do our regulators push for such user-centric changes with the same vigor? Something to think about.
A
Aman W
The part about Samsung not having this limitation is key. It shows how Apple's walled-garden approach can sometimes create problems that open systems don't have. Good on South Korea for holding them accountable for their users' safety.
S
Sarah B
As someone who travels frequently between Delhi and Seoul for work, I appreciate this. But it highlights a patchwork of features. Why should a life-saving tool work better in one country? Apple should implement this globally as a standard, not a special favor.
V
Vikram M
The Google app store commission changes mentioned at the end are equally important for India. Our developers face the same high fees. TRAI and the government should take note and advocate for our ecosystem too. Fair pricing helps Indian startups grow. 👍
K
Karthik V
While I welcome the safety improvement, it's a bit disappointing that it took government pressure for Apple to extend this from 5 to 30 minutes. User safety shouldn't be an afterthought or a regional feature. Hope they roll this out everywhere soon.

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