The South Korean government was forced to launch an inquiry today 
after another massive data breach rocked the country, time the theft of 
account information belonging to 12 million customers of telco KT Corp.
The
 Incheon Metropolitan Police said on Thursday it arrested two hackers 
and the CEO of a telemarketing firm last week on suspicion of 
infiltrating the telco giant’s servers and stealing the data, according 
to Yonhap.
    
  The data grab apparently went undetected by KT for an entire year 
with the suspects allegedly snatching up to 300,000 records in a single 
day. The nabbed details included names, registration numbers and bank 
account info.
The South Korean telecoms ministry has now launched a
 probe, apparently ordering KT to inform customers about what happened 
and to allow them to check if they’ve been affected on a special 
website.
This is the third time in two years that the country’s second biggest carrier has been hit with a major data breach.
In
 March 2012 internal employees at KT and SK Telecom sold data on 200,000
 customers to telemarketers, while in July that year hackers grabbed 
info on 8.7 million punters and sold it on after breaching a customer sales system.
After the last incident, KT promised to tighten up its security to avoid a repeat.
The news comes just a couple of months after an insider at the Korea Credit Bureau made off with 20 million cardholders’ details.
Even
 this breach, however, pales in comparison with the megahack of SK 
Telecom’s Cyworld social networking site and the Nate web portal which exposed data on 35 million Koreans – nearly three-quarters of the population.
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