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CODIT Launches AI Briefs, the World's First Curated AI Tool for Real-Time Policy Monitoring

CODIT Launches AI Briefs, the World's First Curated AI Tool for Real-Time Policy Monitoring

SEOUL, South Korea, June 16, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- CODIT, Korea's leading policy intelligence platform, has announced the launch of AI Briefs, the first-ever AI-powered tool that delivers pre-selected, real-time policy briefings tailored to Korea's rapidly evolving legislative and regulatory environment.
Designed to help global businesses, policymakers, and legal teams stay informed, AI Briefs provides concise, one-line summaries sourced from legislative activity, government announcements, National Assembly remarks, and verified media reports.
'Navigating Korea's fast-changing policy landscape has always been a challenge,' said Ji-Eun Chung, CEO of CODIT. 'AI Briefs was built to solve this — giving users a powerful, real-time solution to monitor, analyze, and respond to policy shifts effortlessly.'
AI Briefs is fully integrated into CODIT's real-time policy dashboard and currently covers high-priority topics such as APEC 2025, artificial intelligence regulation, online platform governance, ESG, fair trade, and healthcare. It also supports customized topic tracking, enabling users to follow policy areas specific to their organization's strategic needs.
To support global teams and cross-border reporting, AI Briefs includes a copy-ready export function, allowing users to instantly copy and share summaries in either English or Korean — perfect for internal reporting, executive updates, or compliance briefings.
Following the inauguration of South Korea's new administration on June 4, CODIT has also launched a dedicated 'New Administration' tab. This section offers up-to-the-minute tracking of new policy directions, cabinet-level decisions, and regulatory shifts under President Lee Jae-myung's leadership.
The launch of AI Briefs comes alongside a broader upgrade of CODIT's legislative monitoring tools. These include customizable Keyword Alerts, an enhanced Lawmaker Directory, and a new Promulgated Bill Tracker that enables users to follow a bill through its full legislative path — including links to the enacted law.
Looking ahead, CODIT is preparing to launch Chat CODIT, a personalized AI policy assistant that will allow users to ask questions, compare legislative drafts, and generate customized policy briefings. Designed to reduce manual workload and streamline internal reporting across legal, policy, and compliance teams, the tool is also expected to make it easier for international stakeholders to follow and understand policy developments in Korea with greater clarity and efficiency.
'AI Briefs has dramatically cut the time we spend on daily policy reviews,' said a regulatory affairs lead at a Fortune 500 company. 'We used to manually sift through multiple sources — now we get exactly what we need, in real time, with full source links.'
View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/codit-launches-ai-briefs-the-worlds-first-curated-ai-tool-for-real-time-policy-monitoring-302482288.html
SOURCE CODIT Corp.
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As South Korea becomes a key arms supplier to US allies, its best customer is on the edge of a warzone
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As South Korea becomes a key arms supplier to US allies, its best customer is on the edge of a warzone

Poland has finalized a deal to acquire a second batch of 180 South Korean tanks under a 2022 agreement that will eventually see Warsaw boost its arsenal with almost 1,000 of the armored vehicles. The deal underlines Poland's emergence as a substantial European military force, as well as South Korea's status as a major arms supplier – especially to US allies as wars around the world exhaust American stockpiles. It comes as Russia ramps up attacks on Ukraine, some of which have come within 100 miles of Polish territory on Ukraine's western border. Warsaw has been increasing defense spending since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, acquiring new weaponry while also helping Kyiv with its defense. As a NATO member bordering Ukraine, it is seen part of the alliance's first line of defense should Russian leader Vladimir Putin decide to expand his aggression beyond Ukraine. 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