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By South Korea correspondent Carrington Clarke , Sookyoung Lee and Mitch Denman Woolnough in Seoul
Posted Wed 16 Jun 2021 at 6:53pm Wednesday 16 Jun 2021 at 6:53pm Wed 16 Jun 2021 at 6:53pm , updated Thu 17 Jun 2021 at 12:54am Thursday 17 Jun 2021 at 12:54am Thu 17 Jun 2021 at 12:54am
abc.net.au/news/spy-cam-sex-crimes-in-south-korea-leave-women-fearful/100214532
Posted 16 Jun 2021 16 Jun 2021 Wed 16 Jun 2021 at 6:53pm , updated 17 Jun 2021 17 Jun 2021 Thu 17 Jun 2021 at 12:54am
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South Korea's spy camera epidemic has women fearful they are watched wherever they go
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When Lee Ye-rin (not her real name) received an expensive clock as a gift from her boss, she assumed he was just trying to be friendly. 
Despite being much older and married with children, Ms Lee's boss had made some clumsy romantic overtures which had made her uncomfortable. 
She had rebuffed him. As they worked together, Ms Lee grew close to his family and believed he understood she wasn't interested in him. 
The clock took pride of place in her bedroom for a while. But when she moved it to another room, something strange happened. 
Her boss confronted her and said if she didn't want the clock, she never should have accepted it in the first place. 
"I found it strange, so I searched online about the clock," Ms Lee said. 
She was horrified to discover it contained a state-of-the-art spy camera.
For more than a month, it had been streaming footage from the inside of Lee Ye-rin's home to her boss' mobile phone 24 hours a day. 
When she confronted him about the clock, Ms Lee said he was unrepentant. 
"Is that the thing you stayed up all night to search?" Ms Lee recalled him saying to her. 
He had been watching her even as she inspected the spying device he had tricked her into putting in her home. 
The clock, sold as a nanny cam for those who want to keep an eye on domestic workers, was promoted as providing perfect footage in the dark. 
"I cried all night. I couldn't sleep. I had to take medicine to soothe myself," Ms Lee said, admitting she still had trouble sleeping a year later.
While Ms Lee's boss was found guilty of illegally recording her and served seven months behind bars, pursuing justice through the courts was another trauma.
She said she was interrogated for hours by male police officers who grilled her on exactly what she had been doing in her bedroom while she was spied on.
Ms Lee also found it difficult to find out what was happening as her case moved through the courts. 
"Victims of that kind of case are not informed when a hearing or ruling will happen. You never know," she said.
"You are not informed and you are not invited either."
A year after she discovered her boss was spying on her, the incident continues to have a huge impact on her mental health.
"What happened took place in my own room. So sometimes in regular life, in my own room, I feel terrified without reason," she said.
But Ms Lee's story is not unusual in South Korea.
Many women live in fear of spy cameras hidden in public spaces and their own homes, positioned to capture them at their most private moments.
A new report from Human Rights Watch (HRW) has found the widespread posting of sexual images of women and girls in South Korea is having a "devastating impact on the victims".
It also said the South Korean government should be doing more to prevent and respond to these digital sex crimes.
While the sharing of intimate images without consent is a global problem, lead researcher Heather Barr told the ABC it seemed to be "a bigger problem in South Korea than pretty much anywhere else".
"One thing that's a bit more unique in South Korea is this use of hidden cameras in places like toilets and changing rooms," Ms Barr said.
The problem is so widespread in South Korea, it even has a name: molka, which means hidden camera.
Women are covertly recorded and the footage is then uploaded to websites visited by men who often pay subscription fees to access them.
Speciality teams in South Korea have been set up to regularly sweep locations such as public restrooms to discover and remove the cameras.
While Ms Barr said the speciality teams were a good sign the government was taking the issue seriously, more needed to be done.
"[There needs to be a] different kind of prevention other than searching toilets," she said.
"And that's really changing people's attitudes."
In South Korea there has been an extraordinary rise in the prevalence of digital sex crimes as technology has advanced.
In 2008, less than 4 per cent of sex crime prosecutions in South Korea involved illegal filming.
By 2017, the number of these cases had increased from 585 cases to 6,615, and they constituted 20 per cent of sex crime prosecutions.
The overwhelming majority of the people targeted in digital sex crimes in South Korea are women.
About 80 per cent of the victims in spy cam cases are female, while the overwhelming majority of perpetrators are male. In 2016, for instance, 98 per cent of perpetrators in spy cam cases were men.
South Korea consistently ranks very low in international comparisons of gender equality , with women regularly experiencing discrimination in their homes, schools and offices.
Ms Barr said until South Korea addressed its conservative view of sexuality and its treatment of women, little would change.
"These crimes are fundamentally about gender inequality," she said.
"And there's such deep gender inequality in South Korea."
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South Korean women have been demonstrating against sexual abuse
Police in South Korea have arrested one of the owners of a notorious revenge porn site banned in 2016.
Sora.net had more than a million users and hosted thousands of videos taken and shared without the knowledge or consent of the women featured.
Korean police say the website's owners made money from illegal brothel and gambling ads on the site.
But the suspect, surnamed Song, has denied this, saying the site's users created the illegal content.
Producing and disseminating pornography is illegal in South Korea. Song has been charged under the Children and Juvenile Sex Protection Law.
She is one of four people, including her husband, who ran the site from 1999 to 2016, using overseas servers, the Korea Herald reports. The other three, who have foreign passports, remain at large.
Two suspects have already been arrested in connection with the case in South Korea.
The use of hidden and up-skirt cameras is a huge problem in South Korea
Many of the website's spy-cam videos were taken secretly in toilets and store changing rooms, or posted by ex-partners out for revenge.
The site was shut following a public outcry. Some of the women who had appeared in the videos took their own lives.
South Korea saw its largest women's rights rally in May, when more than 10,000 women gathered in Seoul to demand the authorities do more to investigate digital sex crimes.
Many women have been angered by the arrest of a female model, who is accused of photographing a male colleague naked without his consent and posting the photo online.
"Just because the victim is a man and the suspect is a woman this time, the country is investigating the case differently," wrote one signatory to a petition sent to the president, according to the daily JoongAng.
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