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Seoul police open Telegram deepfake porn probe

By Manila Times - 3 months ago

SEOUL — South Korean police said on Monday they had launched an investigation into encrypted messaging platform Telegram for allegedly "abetting" the distribution of so-called deepfake porn, including explicit artificial intelligence (AI)-generated images of teenagers.

Deepfake porn includes explicit content where the faces of individuals are digitally superimposed onto other pornographic images or videos using AI technology.

A South Korean broadcaster reported last month that university students were running an illegal Telegram chatroom, sharing deepfake pornographic material of female classmates, one of a slew of high-profile cases that have stoked public anger.

"In light of these (deepfake) crimes, the Seoul National Police Agency launched their probe last week... for abetting the crimes," said Woo Jong-soo, head of the investigation bureau at the National Police Agency, according to a transcript of a press briefing.

"Telegram has been non-responsive to our previous requests for account information during investigations of earlier Telegram-linked crimes," he added.

Police received 88 reports of deepfake porn last week alone, Woo said, adding that they have identified 24 suspects.

The Telegram probe was initiated after Pavel Durov, Telegram's founder and chief executive officer, was arrested in France last month.

Durov, 39, was charged with several counts of failing to curb extremist and illegal content on the popular messaging app.

South Korean police have pledged to "find ways to cooperate with various investigative bodies, including the French, to enhance" their investigation into the platform, Woo said.

AFP has contacted Telegram for comment.

Activists say South Korea is suffering from an epidemic of digital sex crimes, including those involving spy cameras and revenge porn, with inadequate legislation to punish offenders.

Perpetrators of deepfake crimes have reportedly used social media platforms such as Instagram to save or screen-capture photos of victims, which were then used to create fake pornographic material.

This has fueled public anger and prompted President Yoon Suk Yeol, a former prosecutor, to call for officials to "thoroughly investigate and address these digital sex crimes to eradicate them completely."

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