4 students in S. Korea arrested for making, having deepfake porn content of classmates

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Follow topic:

SEOUL – Four middle school students in the city of Namyangju in South Korea have been arrested for producing, possessing and distributing deepfake porn, according to local police.

Police officials confirmed on Oct 26 that two of the students are suspected of using photos of their female classmates to create sexually explicit deepfake content since November 2023.

The two students are also charged with possession of the deepfakes and sharing them with the other two students, who themselves are charged with possession of the content.

The four students have been booked for violating the Act on Special Cases Concerning the Punishment of Sexual Crimes. Under South Korean law, it is a crime to possess sexually explicit deepfake images of minors.

The police have so far identified nine victims, who are all female middle school students. However, the police added that the number could increase as the investigation continues.

Police officials added that detectives have searched the suspects’ homes and their mobile phones for evidence of further offences.

The case is also being investigated by the Gyeonggi Bukbu Provincial Police Agency’s Cyber Investigation Bureau after initially being reported to the Namyangju Bukbu Police Station.

The incident came to light in August when the victims reported to the school that four students had created sexually explicit deepfake images of them and their friends.

The school reported the case to the Guri Namyangju Office of Education, which formed a School Violence Countermeasures Review Committee. The committee decided to transfer the two students who created the deepfake content and suspend the two others accused of possessing the content.

However, local media reports said the victims’ parents have filed a complaint, claiming that their children suffered “secondary victimisation” due to the school’s delayed response – such as taking two months to separate the female victims from the suspects. Secondary victimisation refers to further trauma experienced by victims due to insensitivity, blaming, or dismissive attitudes of others.

From 2021 to August 2024, 1,727 digital sex offences by students were reported to the School Violence Countermeasures Review Committee, according to data provided by 16 provincial and metropolitan education offices to Representative Kang Kyung-sook of the Rebuilding Korea Party.

Of the total number of digital sex offences, in 765 cases, or 44.3 per cent, the committee required “severe punishment” to be taken against the perpetrators.

In South Korea, cases of violence in schools are reviewed by a School Violence Countermeasures Review Committee, which meets after an investigation to confirm the incident and decide on disciplinary actions.

Punishments range from a written apology, no-contact orders or community service to more severe measures such as suspension, class transfer, school transfer or expulsion.

According to Ms Kang, some of the reported digital sex offences include the creation and distribution of sexually explicit deepfake videos and using them to threaten the victim, and the illegal creation and distribution of deepfake and illegally filmed content online. There were also a few cases where the perpetrators sent messages constituting sexual harassment.

“Not only physical violence but also digital sex offences committed online also constitute a type of school violence,” said Ms Kang.

“Active attention, as well as education for the students, must be provided by education authorities to prevent further victimisation of students and to ultimately prevent school violence.” THE KOREA HERALD/ ASIA NEWS NETWORK

See more on