WASHINGTON — A senior U.S. diplomat has expressed concerns over a recently passed revision to a South Korean law aimed at addressing false and fabricated online information, saying it could give regulators an "invasive license for viewpoint-based censorship" and would undermine technology cooperation. Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers made the remarks in social media posts on Tuesday — in a public display of concern over the revision that stoked worries over the possibility of diplomatic and trade tension between the two countries. South Korea's National Assembly passed the amendment to the Information and Communications Network Act last week, which seeks to stop acts of spreading illegal and fabricated information online, which would instigate violence and discrimination. "South Korea's proposed amendment to its Network Act, ostensibly focused on redressing defamatory deepfakes, reaches much further — and endangers tech cooperation," she wrote on X. "Deepfakes are understandably concerning, but it's better to give victims civil remedies than give regulator