Park Ha-sun Confesses Crime Damage in Deepfake: Emerging as a Serious …
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Actor Park Ha-sun gave a big shock when she revealed the damage of deepfake sex crimes on MBC Everyone's Hidden Eye, which recently aired. Park Ha-sun announced through her experience that deepfake crimes are becoming more serious.
Park Ha-sun's shocking experience
"Someone reported me through SNS, and when I saw the composite photo for the first time, I felt like my whole body was bleeding," Park said, expressing his appalling feelings at the time. He said he was tried for three years after suing the perpetrator, and eventually found out that the culprit was a professor at a university. Park expressed her sorrow, saying, "I committed the crime by abusing my pictures with my grandfather's fans." The result of the trial concluded with a fine, but her damage remains a deep wound.
Confessing the damage of Soyou's deepfake
Soyou, a former member of the girl group SISTAR, shared a similar experience. Ten years ago, before the term deepfake was coined, she came across a composite photo of herself through an acquaintance and said that she was not shocked at first, but felt very bad when she checked it on the video. As such, the damage to celebrities continues to be revealed.
Current Status of Deep Fake Crimes
Former lawmaker Chang Sang-won, a former profiler, pointed to Deepfake as a crime in 2024, stressing that South Korea is emerging as a global center of deepfake crime. He said, "According to an overseas security company survey last year, 53 percent of the victims of deepfake sex crimes were Koreans, and 99 percent of the victims were women."
According to the National Police Agency, the number of cases of deepfake sex crimes received from January to November this year amounted to 1,094 cases, with 573 suspects arrested. In particular, 463 teenagers accounting for 80.8% of the total, making the problem of deepfake even more serious. According to a survey by the Ministry of Education, half of middle and high school students perceive deepfake as a "joke."
Park Ha-sun's shocking experience
"Someone reported me through SNS, and when I saw the composite photo for the first time, I felt like my whole body was bleeding," Park said, expressing his appalling feelings at the time. He said he was tried for three years after suing the perpetrator, and eventually found out that the culprit was a professor at a university. Park expressed her sorrow, saying, "I committed the crime by abusing my pictures with my grandfather's fans." The result of the trial concluded with a fine, but her damage remains a deep wound.
Confessing the damage of Soyou's deepfake
Soyou, a former member of the girl group SISTAR, shared a similar experience. Ten years ago, before the term deepfake was coined, she came across a composite photo of herself through an acquaintance and said that she was not shocked at first, but felt very bad when she checked it on the video. As such, the damage to celebrities continues to be revealed.
Current Status of Deep Fake Crimes
Former lawmaker Chang Sang-won, a former profiler, pointed to Deepfake as a crime in 2024, stressing that South Korea is emerging as a global center of deepfake crime. He said, "According to an overseas security company survey last year, 53 percent of the victims of deepfake sex crimes were Koreans, and 99 percent of the victims were women."
According to the National Police Agency, the number of cases of deepfake sex crimes received from January to November this year amounted to 1,094 cases, with 573 suspects arrested. In particular, 463 teenagers accounting for 80.8% of the total, making the problem of deepfake even more serious. According to a survey by the Ministry of Education, half of middle and high school students perceive deepfake as a "joke."
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