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Home » South Korea confronts unseen scars of AI sex crimes: ‘the law didn’t protect me’
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South Korea confronts unseen scars of AI sex crimes: ‘the law didn’t protect me’

adminBy adminApril 20, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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When Ruma*, a graduate student in South Korea, received sexually explicit doctored images of herself via Telegram in 2021, she could not sleep for weeks. The images were generated using artificial intelligence (AI) based on her public profile photo and when she turned to police, they told her there was nothing they could do.

“I felt like I was alone,” Ruma, 31, told This Week in Asia. “I had to gather the evidence myself and even identify the culprit … it felt like I was doing the police’s job.”

The suspect, a college alumnus surnamed Park, had targeted 61 women, distributing 1,852 AI-generated explicit images through the Telegram messaging app. Park and his accomplice, known as Kang, referred to themselves as “photo composition experts”.

In September, Park and Kang were sentenced to 10 years and four years in prison, respectively. They later filed an appeal and on Friday, an appellate court reduced their sentences to nine years for Park and three years six months for Kang, taking into account that they had reached a settlement with some of the victims.

Ruma’s case is emblematic of a surge in digital sex crimes in South Korea. More than 18,000 such cases were documented in 2024 – a 12.7 per cent increase from the previous year – according to the country’s gender equality and family ministry.

More than 800 students and staff members across 504 schools in South Korea fell victim to deepfake sex crimes in just one month. Photo: Shutterstock
More than 800 students and staff members across 504 schools in South Korea fell victim to deepfake sex crimes in just one month. Photo: Shutterstock

Especially alarming is the explosion of deepfake technology used in these crimes, with such cases rising by 227 per cent last year alone. Deepfakes use AI to mimic a person’s face, voice, or actions – with victims often inserted into fabricated pornographic content.



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