Technology

Kakao co-CEO resigns after mass outage locked 53 million users out

Whon Namkoong, co-chief executive officer of Kakao Corp., speaks during a news conference in in Pangyo, South Korea, on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2022. Namkoong resigned after a widespread outage took out Koreas most popular messaging and social media service. Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A top executive at Kakao Corp., the operator of South Korea’s top mobile messenger KakaoTalk, will step down. His resignation comes after a fire at a data center led to a mass outage over the weekend and disrupted services for its messenger’s 53 million users worldwide.

Co-CEO Namkoong Whon apologized following the outage and said he would resign.

“I feel the heavy burden of responsibility over this incident and will step down from my position as CEO and lead the emergency disaster task force overseeing the aftermath of the incident,” Namkoong said at a press conference at the company’s office in the outskirts of Seoul on Wednesday.

“We will do our best to restore our users’ faith in Kakao and make sure incidents like these never happen again,” he said, according to a CNBC translation.

Namkoong was appointed CEO in March, according to the company’s website. Kakao reported 47.5 million monthly active users in South Korea during the second quarter. That’s more than 90% of South Korea’s population of 51.74 million people, as of Nov. 1, 2021.

Co-CEOs Whon Namkoong (L) and Hong Eun-taek (R) bow before they depart a news conference in Pangyo, South Korea on Oct. 19, 2022. Namkoong resigned after an outage over the weekend locked out millions of users.
SeongJoon Cho | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Hong Eun-taek, who led the company alongside Namkoong as co-CEO, will remain the sole head of the company, according to a company filing.

“We sincerely apologize to all those that have suffered from the disruptions during the outage,” Hong said as he bowed alongside Namkoong.

Shares of the company traded 4% higher in South Korea’s morning session ahead of the press conference.

Articles You May Like

Rust weapons supervisor jailed over fatal shooting on Alec Baldwin film set
Tesla slashes price of its premium driver assistance option by half in U.S.
Organisers insist changes have been made to Grand National – as two horses die at Aintree
Netanyahu convenes Israeli war cabinet as Iran attacks
Executor of OJ Simpson’s will wants to block $33.5m payout to families