K-pop agency JYP vows ‘strongest legal action’ against deepfake videos
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SEOUL – A major K-pop agency has vowed to take the “strongest legal action” against deepfake videos depicting its artistes, after local media reports exposing Telegram chat rooms for sharing artificial intelligence-generated pornography sparked public outrage.
South Korea is the country most susceptible to deepfake porn, according to a 2023 report by cyber security start-up Security Hero, with singers and actresses from the rising cultural powerhouse accounting for 53 per cent of the individuals featured in the content it reviewed.
“We are gravely concerned about the recent spread of deepfake videos involving our artistes,” said a statement issued late on Aug 30 by K-pop agency JYP Entertainment, whose artistes include the popular girl group Twice.
“We are collecting all relevant evidence to pursue the strongest legal action with a leading law firm, without leniency.”
Earlier this week, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol called for an investigation into deepfake porn
According to media reports, victims have included soldiers, teachers and students.
JYP’s announcement comes about two months after fellow K-pop label Ador said the police were investigating the creators and distributors profiting from obscene deepfake content depicting the firm’s hugely popular girl group NewJeans.
Some of the offenders had already been convicted and sentenced, Ador said at the time.
Activists say South Korea is plagued by an acute epidemic of digital sex crimes, including spy cams and revenge porn, with inadequate legislation to punish offenders.
In 2019, K-pop star Goo Hara took her own life
And while South Korea is a leading technological power and increasingly a major exporter of its pop culture, it remains a socially conservative society with a poor record on women’s rights.
In recent years, however, a new #MeToo generation has mobilised on a host of issues, including legalising abortion, triggering an online backlash against so-called “radical feminism”.
Before being elected, Mr Yoon had claimed South Korean women did not suffer from “systemic gender discrimination”, despite evidence to the contrary in the form of gaps in wages and workforce participation.
He won office in 2022 in part on a campaign pledge to abolish the Ministry of Gender Equality, with some of his supporters going so far as to label the women’s movement a “mental illness”. AFP

