Female founder of S. Korea's largest porn site arrested

Jun 27, 2018

They are also accused of abetting illegal activities by Soranet members who shared videos in which women were secretly filmed in public

 
PIC: The spread of revenge porn and spycam porn in South Korea has prompted protests and calls for tech giants including Google, Youtube, Facebook and Twitter to work harder to curb high-tech sex crimes in the hyper-wired country. (AFP)
 
 
A woman who co-founded South Korea's largest pornography website has been arrested after living as a fugitive in New Zealand for years, Police said. 
 
Soranet, set up in 1999, held tens of thousands of illegal porn videos including "revenge porn" and spycam porn videos of women secretly filmed at public locations.
 
Distributing pornography is illegal in South Korea, although many such videos are widely consumed on servers based in foreign countries, or secretly shared on file-sharing sites.
 
Soranet, which once boasted more than one million members, was closed two years ago following complaints from women's rights groups.
 
The 45-year-old owner, surnamed Song, returned to Seoul last week after South Korean authorities annulled her passport.
 
She was arrested on Monday for distributing or aiding the distribution of sex videos featuring minors, police said.  
 
Her husband and another couple known to be co-owners of the site, all of whom have Australian citizenship or permanent residency, remain overseas.
 
They are also accused of abetting illegal activities by Soranet members who shared videos in which women were secretly filmed in public toilets, classrooms, changing rooms, subways and other public locations.
 
Some members were also accused of jointly planning gang rapes, some of which targeted minors, and posting videos of the victims on the site.
 
The owners are believed to have earned tens of millions of dollars from advertising promoting websites that arrange prostitution and gambling -- both technically illegal but widespread in South Korea.
 
So-called spycam videos have become increasingly common in the country, where men caught secretly filming women in schools and workplaces, toilets and changing rooms, make headlines on a daily basis. 
 
South Korean President Moon Jae-in said last month that the spycam epidemic had become a "part of daily life" and urged a wider crackdown and tougher punishments for offenders.  
 

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