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In South Korea, thousands of women rallied on Saturday for a demonstration in Seoul to urge the government to fight harder against secret photography and video distribution.
According to police estimates, some 20,000 women took part in the demonstration against the "hidden camera", but organizers of the demonstration claim that the number of participants reached 55,000.
The distribution of badgraphy in Korea South is forbidden by law, but videos on badgraphic sites and elsewhere on the Internet are widely available for women filmed clandestinely in schools, workplaces, restrooms and detention booths. The media regularly read that men are stripped naked by women.
"These men who make such videos! Those who download them! Those who watch them! They should all be severely punished!"
Their posters say "My life is not your badgraphy" and "We are people, not bad objects for your sick fantasy."
Most of the protesters were teenage girls or young women usually spied on.
In South Korea, these crimes increased from about 1,100 cases in 2010 to more than 6,500 cases last year. However, most cases have resulted in the imposition of fines or conditional sentences on defendants who, according to the protesters, are disproportionately disadvantaged.
Male offenders include teachers, teachers, physicians, public servants, and police.
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