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South Korea Deepfake Porn
Citizens stage a rally against deepfake sex crime in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)
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In South Korea, deepfake porn wrecks women's lives and deepens gender conflict

16 Comments
By HYUNG-JIN KIM

Three years after the 30-year-old South Korean woman received a barrage of online fake images that depicted her nude, she is still being treated for trauma. She struggles to talk with men. Using a mobile phone brings back the nightmare.

“It completely trampled me, even though it wasn’t a direct physical attack on my body,” she said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. She didn't want her name revealed because of privacy concerns.

Many other South Korean women recently have come forward to share similar stories as South Korea grapples with a deluge of non-consensual, explicit deepfake videos and images that have become much more accessible and easier to create.

It was not until last week that parliament revised a law to make watching or possessing deepfake porn content illegal.

Most suspected perpetrators in South Korea are teenage boys. Observers say the boys target female friends, relatives and acquaintances -– also mostly minors —- as a prank, out of curiosity or misogyny. The attacks raise serious questions about school programs but also threaten to worsen an already troubled divide between men and women.

Deepfake porn in South Korea gained attention after unconfirmed lists of schools that had victims spread online in August. Many girls and women have hastily removed photos and videos from their Instagram, Facebook and other social media accounts. Thousands of young women have staged protests demanding stronger steps against deepfake porn. Politicians, academics and activists have held forums.

“Teenage (girls) must be feeling uneasy about whether their male classmates are okay. Their mutual trust has been completely shattered,” said Shin Kyung-ah, a sociology professor at South Korea’s Hallym University.

The school lists have not been formally verified, but officials including President Yoon Suk Yeol have confirmed a surge of explicit deepfake content on social media. Police have launched a seven-month crackdown.

Recent attention to the problem has coincided with France’s arrest in August of Pavel Durov, the founder of the messaging app Telegram, over allegations that his platform was used for illicit activities including the distribution of child sexual abuse. The South Korean government said Monday that Telegram has pledged to enforce a zero-tolerance policy on illegal deepfake content.

Police say they’ve detained 387 people over alleged deepfake crimes this year, more than 80% of them teenagers. Separately, the Education Ministry says about 800 students have informed authorities about intimate deepfake content involving them this year.

Experts say the true scale of deepfake porn in the country is far bigger.

The U.S. cybersecurity firm Security Hero called South Korea “the country most targeted by deepfake pornography” last year. In a report, it said South Korean singers and actresses constitute more than half of the people featured in deepfake pornography worldwide.

The prevalence of deepfake porn in South Korea reflects various factors including heavy use of smart phones; an absence of comprehensive sex and human rights education in schools and inadequate social media regulations for minors as well as a “misogynic culture” and social norms that “sexually objectify women,” according to Hong Nam-hee, a research professor at the Institute for Urban Humanities at the University of Seoul.

Victims speak of intense suffering.

In parliament, lawmaker Kim Nam Hee read a letter by an unidentified victim who she said tried to kill herself because she didn't want to suffer any longer from the explicit deepfake videos someone had made of her. Addressing a forum, former opposition party leader Park Ji-hyun read a letter from another victim who said she fainted and was taken to an emergency room after receiving sexually abusive deepfake images and being told by her perpetrators that they were stalking her.

The 30-year-old woman interviewed by The AP said that her doctoral studies in the United States were disrupted for a year. She is receiving treatment after being diagnosed with panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder in 2022.

Police said they've detained five men for allegedly producing and spreading fake explicit contents of about 20 women, including her. The victims are all graduates from Seoul National University, the country’s top school. Two of the men, including one who allegedly sent her fake nude images in 2021, attended the same university, but she said has no meaningful memory of them.

The woman said the images she received on Telegram used photos she had posted on the local messaging app Kakao Talk, combined with nude photos of strangers. There were also videos showing men masturbating and messages describing her as a promiscuous woman or prostitute. One photo shows a screen shot of a Telegram chatroom with 42 people where her fake images were posted.

The fake images were very crudely made but the woman felt deeply humiliated and shocked because dozens of people -- some of whom she likely knows – were sexually harassing her with those photos.

Building trust with men is stressful, she said, because she worries that “normal-looking people could do such things behind my back.”

Using a smart phone sometimes revives memories of the fake images.

“These days, people spend more time on their mobile phones than talking face to face with others. So we can’t really easily escape the traumatic experience of digital crimes if those happen on our phones,” she said. “I was very sociable and really liked to meet new people, but my personality has totally changed since that incident. That made my life really difficult and I’m sad.”

Critics say authorities haven’t done enough to counter deepfake porn despite an epidemic of online sex crimes in recent years, such as spy cam videos of women in public toilets and other places. In 2020, members of a criminal ring were arrested and convicted of blackmailing dozens of women into filming sexually explicit videos for them to sell.

“The number of male juveniles consuming deepfake porn for fun has increased because authorities have overlooked the voices of women” demanding stronger punishment for digital sex crimes, the monitoring group ReSET said in comments sent to AP.

South Korea has no official records on the extent of deepfake online porn. But Reset said a recent random search of an online chatroom found more than 4,000 sexually exploitive images, videos and other items.

Reviews of district court rulings showed less than a third of the 87 people indicted by prosecutors for deepfake crimes since 2021 were sent to prison. Nearly 60% avoided jail by receiving suspended terms, fines or not-guilty verdicts, according to lawmaker Kim's office. Judges tended to lighten sentences when those convicted repented for their crimes or were first time offenders.

The deepfake problem has gained urgency given South Korea's serious rifts over gender roles, workplace discrimination, mandatory military service for men and social burdens on men and women.

Kim Chae-won, a 25-year-old office worker, said some of her male friends shunned her after she asked them what they thought about digital sex violence targeting women.

“I feel scared of living as a woman in South Korea,” said Kim Haeun, a 17-year-old high school student who recently removed all her photos on Instagram. She said she feels awkward when talking with male friends and tries to distance herself from boys she doesn't know well.

“Most sex crimes target women. And when they happen, I think we are often helpless," she said.

© Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.


16 Comments
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Sad statement about some sick folks in society today. Even sadder is that there is no way to stop it either.

8 ( +9 / -1 )

So woke.

Fakes have always existed since before it was about pictures.

Punish mostly kids because they think a lot about sex ?

Demography will go down to the drain.

Society making popular women showing off very sexy on social networks is the problem. Success should be about creating intelligent/helpful stuff, not material success.

Punishing someone for deepfakes if the person doesn't even know it is deepfake since by definition you may not guess if true or not ?

Welcome to the matrix !

By the way, both men and women are part of the problem.

-11 ( +2 / -13 )

@Jonathan Prin

If you don't understand the article just say that

11 ( +11 / -0 )

So woke.

Jonathon Prin : "Anything I don't like is WOKE! "

The sociopathic scum that produce this filth deliberately wreck lives. They need to be named publicly, brought to court and prosecuted, and jailed. The fact that only 1/3rd of those prosecuted are jailed is disgraceful.

7 ( +8 / -1 )

It is sad to read a story like this, I don't know why the culture of South Korea is very much "men vs women" it is that same culture that is causing the decline in the birthrate in Korea. Women don't feel safe and don't want to be a traditional woman

7 ( +8 / -1 )

An ugly trend.

Most suspected perpetrators in South Korea are teenage boys

I suspected as much

rulings showed less than a third of the 87 people indicted by prosecutors for deepfake crimes since 2021 were sent to prison. 

Sending teenage boys to prison for ugly, poor judgements is the solution?

-9 ( +0 / -9 )

I don't se a problem here!? If these are NOT your photos then simply BLOCK the sender and report him or her end of story.

-3 ( +2 / -5 )

"In South Korea, deepfake porn wrecks women's lives and deepens gender conflict."

This issue not only in South Korean but a global problem where women are portrayed as sexual products, nudity and bikinis is the new selling point. Moreover, not only the makers these deep fakes should be held accountable but those platforms hosting them.

-3 ( +1 / -4 )

Pornography should be illegal worldwide. It and addiction to it is causing these messes that we see worldwide.

-8 ( +1 / -9 )

I don't se a problem here!? If these are NOT your photos then simply BLOCK the sender and report him or her end of story.

It’s never that simple. Once something is out there, it stays out there, and can affect your life in many ways even if you can’t personally see it. Nowhere near the end of the story.

7 ( +7 / -0 )

Pornography should be illegal worldwide. It and addiction to it is causing these messes that we see worldwide.

No, I disagree. Porn is the one guilty pleasure that can help a lot of frustrated people, men and woman, it can be a stress-reliever, outlaw it and I guarantee you rape and sodomy will go through the roof. I get it, porn is not for everyone and I think Childporn should be banned, deepfakes as well, but outlawing porn altogether? Try it and it will go underground, supply and demand, if there is a want and a need (and humans do need) the demand for porn will always be here.

0 ( +3 / -3 )

bass4funk,

No, I disagree. Porn is the one guilty pleasure that can help a lot of frustrated people, men and woman, it can be a stress-reliever, outlaw it and I guarantee you rape and sodomy will go through the roof. I get it, porn is not for everyone and I think Childporn should be banned, deepfakes as well, but outlawing porn altogether? Try it and it will go underground, supply and demand, if there is a want and a need (and humans do need) the demand for porn will always be here.

You have a logical argument here, but pornography should not be every where and readily accessible. Case and point "contacts in social media" with extended contacts which complicates things. Hosting media should have designed corners strictly for it

-5 ( +0 / -5 )

You have a logical argument here, but pornography should not be every where and readily accessible. Case and point "contacts in social media" with extended contacts which complicates things. Hosting media should have designed corners strictly for it

I think you’re right and I would not disagree with that analogy. There should definitely be some parameters put in place, warnings, labels, advisory discretion, and as you said, this should be limited as to its accessibility

1 ( +2 / -1 )

I don't se a problem here!? If these are NOT your photos then simply BLOCK the sender and report him or her end of story.

There's this little thing you may have heard of - the internet. You cant just "block" things that are on there. Once your illegally posted image is online, it is very difficult - maybe impossible - to remove it.

Lives have been lost due to suicide over this, which is why jailing is absolutely appropriate for the trash who commit these crimes.

4 ( +4 / -0 )

Is this a bigger issue in SK than elsewhere, or are people in SK simply more aware of it? Most deep fake reporting in the West has been about celebrity women like pop stars and Hollywood actresses, not ordinary women.

Does SK have much of a porn industry? The porn industry is highly exploitative and problematic, but serves in somewhat satisfying a demand that undeniably exists.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Is this a bigger issue in SK than elsewhere, or are people in SK simply more aware of it? Most deep fake reporting in the West has been about celebrity women like pop stars and Hollywood actresses, not ordinary women.

Does SK have much of a porn industry? The porn industry is highly exploitative and problematic, but serves in somewhat satisfying a demand that undeniably exists.

It happens all around the world yes but it is more of a big thing in South Korea as far as using it for blackmailing or scamming. Years ago there was a thing called "spycams" which was perverted recordings of Kpop idols without their consent from concerts or being in public or whatever. But like @Fighto! said stuff like that wears people down and causes them to be depressed or take their own life. The ones causing all that harm deserve jail time and men in SK need to do better as a whole and teach the younger generation how bad that is. There's some people all around the world that don't know what consent is and don't know that consent also can't be given by someone who is drunk or asleep either

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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