South Korea Criminalizes Watching Or Possessing Sexually Explicit Deepfakes (reuters.com)
- Reference: 0175140929
- News link: https://yro.slashdot.org/story/24/09/27/012256/south-korea-criminalizes-watching-or-possessing-sexually-explicit-deepfakes
- Source link: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/south-korea-criminalise-watching-or-possessing-sexually-explicit-deepfakes-2024-09-26/
> South Korean lawmakers on Thursday passed a bill that [1]criminalizes possessing or watching sexually explicit deepfake images and videos , with penalties set to include prison terms and fines. There has been an outcry in South Korea over Telegram group chats where sexually explicit and illegal deepfakes were [2]created and widely shared , prompting calls for tougher punishment. Anyone purchasing, saving or watching such material could face up to three years in jail or be fined up to 30 million won ($22,600), according to the bill.
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> Currently, making sexually explicit deepfakes with the intention of distributing them is punishable by five years in prison or a fine of 50 million won under the Sexual Violence Prevention and Victims Protection Act. When the new law takes effect, the maximum sentence for such crimes will also increase to seven years regardless of the intention. The bill will now need the approval of President Yoon Suk Yeol in order to be enacted. South Korean police have so far handled more than 800 deepfake sex crime cases this year, the Yonhap news agency reported on Thursday. That compares with 156 for all of 2021, when data was first collated. Most victims and perpetrators are teenagers, police say.
[1] https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/south-korea-criminalise-watching-or-possessing-sexually-explicit-deepfakes-2024-09-26/
[2] https://tech.slashdot.org/story/24/08/28/2112225/south-korea-faces-deepfake-porn-emergency
I wonder... (Score:2)
If I like watching p0rn, then how do I check that the p0rn I have is not deepfake? Will this law effectively ban p0rn in Korea?
Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
Thing is, pornography is already illegal in South Korea.
According to Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pornography_laws_by_region), these are the applicable 3 laws:
> Article 243 (Distribution, etc. of Obscene Pictures)
> Any person who distributes, sells, lends, openly displays or shows any obscene documents, drawing, pictures, films or other things, shall be punished by imprisonment for not more than one year or by a fine not exceeding five million won.[9]
> Article 244 (Manufacture, etc. of Obscene Pictures)
> A person who, for the purpose of accomplishing the acts as prescribed in Article 243, manufactures, possesses, imports or exports obscene goods, shall be punished by imprisonment for not more than one year or by a fine not exceeding five million won.[9]
> Article 44-7 (Prohibition on Circulation of Unlawful Information)
> No one may circulate any of the following information through an information and communications network: 1. Information with obscene content distributed, sold, rented, or displayed openly in the form of code, words, sound, images, or motion picture;[10]
And to help confirm my interpretation, I did a quick web search and found this list-a-cle "10 things you didn't know are illegal in Korea" and it lists pornography (tattoos really took me by surprise): https://10mag.com/illegal-in-korea/
Re: (Score:3)
Tell that to the starving North Koreans.
Re: (Score:2)
Watch a riot in Yongsan and the billy clubs in action, and the endless line of paddy wagon buses.
Starvation is presumed in the past. The beatings and repression are real.
Re: (Score:2)
Freedom is relative and SK is relatively very free compared to NK.
But I will gladly agree that anti-pornography laws (where consenting adults are concerned) are an infringement of the rights of the population and that it is therefore authoritarian and immoral for government to restrict the production or distribution thereof, and that this falls into the category of "things that should not even be subject to a vote" because it's a matter of your basic and fundamental liberties: chiefly freedom of expression
Re: (Score:2)
The dog meat thing is interesting. I was there around 2008 and there were restaurants openly serving dog meat. My hosts asked me if I would like to try one of those places and I politely declined. But I did try the " [1]Beondegi [wikipedia.org]" (silk worm pupae) at a pub. Not bad... a bit like potato chips. Good protein.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beondegi
Re: (Score:2)
The dog meat thing in that area has been hard for me to get a fix on. It seems like a lot of people in the places where it happens consider it abhorrent but obviously not enough to stop it and of course it has it's fans who know their favorite food is in the crosshairs.
I dunno man I don't like it either but I hear pigs are such nice animals that I go out of my way to never interact with them alive. So am I any better?
The slikworm pupae thing is crazy though, can't say i loved every dish i've tried with th
Re: (Score:2)
Korea is a funny place. There are hookers, but they are in brothels in certain places like Itaewon, a district in Seoul. There is no obvious porn. You'd think people were disinterested in sex, but Koreans tend to go for cheesecake shots of young women, and you see a lot of that on Korean tv.
Re: (Score:3)
You already get nailed for porn, as porn is illegal in ROK. This is simply "this kind of porn gets you this much punishment, whereas that kind of porn gets you that much". It's a qualitative difference in punishment depending on how offensive the material is.
possession (Score:3)
pretty soon mere possession of genetalia will be grounds for imprisonment
Re: (Score:2)
Boy you gonna make some transhumanists mad.
Re: (Score:2)
don't some feminists want possession of MALE genitalia to be grounds for rape charges?
so just viewing pop up ads can = jail / prison tim (Score:2)
so just viewing pop up ads can = jail / prison time?
Also are allowed to hack / bypass DRM (install ad block) to not view ads?
Dangerous (Score:2)
We have to define AI and approaching things. We have to define fair use for AI.
Just like we can read a book and learn so should an AI be able to. Just like we can read something and draw an image representing it so should an AI be able to. Just like we can fantasize so should an AI be able to and generate images and sound from it. Are we going to allow government to outlaw certain thoughts? Our own thinking is related to what "AI" is doing.
A separate issue: So far no AI has risen to status of person. So no
Re: (Score:2)
Sophia, a robot with (she is said to have) an AI is legally a person in Saudi Arabia, sure it was a publicity stunt the Saudis did to try to pretend that they are not actually as backward as the western world thinks they are, but still, it is legally a person there. I'm not sure but I believe that the UN also granted it 'personhood'
I wonder... (Score:2)
If someone sends me an email with a sexual explicit deepfake and I open it, do I get sent to jail?
Fun Fact (Score:3)
Some governments consider viewing material on a computer the same as creating it, as you are generating files on your computer (web browser cache) therefore you are "creating" material.
Re: (Score:2)
that should be something for the jury to deside.
Re: (Score:2)
i don't use ai llm's so i don't know if this is a thing, could you email a link with appropriate parameters as part of the url to create an image from a llm?
Re: (Score:3)
well pay me $250 or I rat you out
Re: (Score:1)
Cops used to keep a "ham sandwich" (stolen gun) in their car to "find" on folks who gave them any shit. Say you pull someone over and they give you some attitude. Well, you can give them some back quite easily "Ohhhhh, lookie here what I found. CATCH" and he throws you the unloaded gun. You catch it. Now it's got your prints on it. "Well whaddya know, Mr Smart Ass here has a stolen gun!"
Now all they need is a USB stick with some deepfake porn. If the cop himself gets busted with it he can always say it wa
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, there was a famous building security recording of a police officer shooting an unarmed criminal in the back as the criminal ran, walking up to him, shooting him in the head, execution style, then walking back to his police car retrieving a pistol, firing it a couple of times, then dropped it near the dead criminals' hands. used his gloved hands to make the dead guys hands grip it... the sight was shocking for me.
This was back maybe 12 years ago? 10?
Re: I wonder... (Score:3)
Generally how itâ(TM)s meant to work is that you ring up the police and tell them, and they prosecute the person who sent it. Of course, if you trust that process to work like that, then boy do I have a bridge to sell you.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know about Korean Police, but in the USA it appears many cops would take the easy route and just arrest you rather than searching out the sender, even though that would appear to be trivial.