When using public restrooms in subway stations, bus terminals and shopping malls, women "have sealed up any tiny, suspicious-looking holes on the walls of their stalls and in door hinges with tissue papers and stickers in fear of mini spy cams that may be installed there,” Lee Won-up, director of Spy-Zone Korea, which specializes in spy cam detection, told ABC News. MORE: Thousands of women protest against spy cameras, gender-biased investigations This phenomenon, dubbed the “spy cam epidemic,” sparked public outrage once again in March when police arrested suspects accused of installing hidden cameras in motels. More than 6,000 crimes related to illegal filming were reported in 2017, a five-fold increase since 2010, according to the Korean National Police Agency. It turned out that the footage was taken from a hidden camera installed in a motel room unbeknownst to them. In 2017, a male victim reported to the center that he found a sex tape of himself with his girlfriend on a porn website.
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Plus, the anonymity in cyberspace makes the punishment extremely difficult.”
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“Overseas porn websites often refuse to cooperate with the South Korean law enforcement. “Victims are often left with no power to exercise control over the videos once they circulate online without their consent,” Kim Yeo-jin, director of Korea Cyber Sexual Violence Response Center, an organization that provides support service for victims of cyber sexual violence, told ABC News.