4/07/2019

Headline April 08, 2018/ '' 'SOUTH KOREA -CRIMES - SPYINGCAMS' ''


'' 'SOUTH KOREA 

- CRIMES - SPYINGCAMS' ''




SEOUL : SOUTH KOREA SPYCAM CRIMES puts hidden camera industry under growing scrutiny.

The number of spycam crimes reported to police surged from around 2,400 in 2012 to nearly 6,500   in 2017.

According to the official statistics about 98 percent of convicted offenders are men - ranging from  school teachers and college professors to church pastors and police officers - while more than 80 percent of victims are women.

SHIN JANG-jins shop in Incheon offers seemingly innocuous household items, from pens and lighters to watches and smoke detectors, but with a secret feature - a hidden one millimetre-wide-lens that can shoot video.

Over the past decade, Shin has sold thousands of gadgets. But his industry is coming under pressure as ultra wired South Korea battles a growing epidemic of so-called ''molka'', or spycam videos -mostly of women, secretly filmed by men in public places.

Shin insists his gadgets serve a useful purpose, allowing people to capture evidence of domestic violence or child abuse, and told AFP he has refused to serve customers looking to spy on women in toilets.

''They thought I would understand them as fellow man. I turned them away.'' But the 52-year old admits he is not always able to spot unscrupulous buyers.

In 2015 he was questioned by police after one of his products - a camera installed inside a mobile phone cover - was used to secretly film a women in a dressing room at a water park outside Seoul.

He had sold the device to a female customer and said he had no idea she would use it to film and distribute illicit footage online.

Under current regulations, spycam buyers are not required to give personal information, making it difficult to trace their ownership and use of the devices.

But some lawmakers are hoping to change that, co-sponsoring a bill in August that requires hidden camera buyers to register with a government database, raising alarm among retailers like Shin.

Crime Surge : Spycam crimes have become so prevalent that female police officers now regularly  inspect public toilets to check for camera in women's stalls.

In one case, offenders had livestreamed footage of around 800 couples having sex - filmed in hotel rooms using cameras installed inside hairdryer holders, wall sockets and digital TV boxes.

As well as secretly filming women, in schools, toilets and offices, ''revenge porn'' - private sex videos filmed and shared without permission by disgruntled ex-boyfriends, ex husbands, or malicious acquaintances is believed to be equally widespread.

In a burgeoning scandal that has shaken South Korea's entertainment industry, K-pop star Jung Joon-young was arrested this month on charges of filming and distributing illicit sex videos without the consent of his female partners.

The number of spycam crimes reported to police surged from around 2,400 in 2012 nearly 6,500 in 2017.

According to official statistics about 98 percent of convicted offenders are men ranging from school teachers and college professors to church pastors and police officers - while more than 80 percent of victims are women.

Malicious Intentions : ''I turn customers away when it isn't clear why and what they want hidden camera for,'' Lee Seuying-yon, who customises spycam gadgets in Seoul, told AFP.

The Global Operational Research on Spying Camera and The State-of-the-World, continues. The World Students Society thanks AFP Agencies for the research and publishing.

With respectful dedication to the Leaders, Grandparents, Parents, Students, Professors and teachers of the world.

See Ya all prepare for Great Global Elections and ''register'' on The World Students Society : wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter -!E-WOW! - the Ecosystem 2011:

'''' Crimes & Scrutiny '''

Good Night and God Bless

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

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