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Recently, used goods trading sites are popular, but it is a problem because there is not much damage to fraud.

The government has stepped forward to amend the law to prevent this, but the industry is opposing it.



Reporter Han Sang-woo reports.



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Office worker, Mr. Kim, paid 450,000 won while buying a mobile phone in a second-hand country last month.



[Pre-owned country scam victim: I deposited money.

From the next day, I couldn't contact you.] There



were dozens of victims, but there was no action by the Second and Secondary Countries.



[Pre-owned country fraud victims: As a netizen investigation unit, we found out the perpetrator's contact information and personal matters, and we gathered and submitted such personal matters to the police.] The



situation is also the same at the carrot market, which has exploded in transactions recently.



Trusting in a system that allowed only people in the same area to transact with each other, they remitted 420,000 won for used bags, and then several victims took the money.



The carrot market is not responsible because it only brokers.



[Carrot Market Fraud Victim: I first reported it to the carrot market.

I reported it, but I just told the police to report it like this...

.] In the last



5 years, 70,000 applications for online transaction damage relief have been received by the Consumer Agency.



The Fair Trade Commission issued an amendment saying that it is unreasonable to receive legal immunity because the e-commerce platform is an intermediary.




If the seller disconnects or refuses to refund, the platform operator must provide the seller's real name, address, and phone number to the victim.



We also decided to recommend the use of a payment deposit system that allows you to receive money after delivery.



However, companies are protesting that they incite serious personal information infringement and, as a result, leave the responsibility for resolving disputes to individuals.



It is expected that platform operators will be controversial over the extent to which they will be liable for transactions.



(Video coverage: Cho Chun-dong, Video editing: Won-hee Won)