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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/86809...as-and-live-streamed-footage-to-online-pervs/
CREEP SHOW Gang secretly filmed 1,600 hotel guests in their rooms with hidden cameras and live-streamed footage to online pervs
Voyeurs have been paying £40-a-month to watch unsuspecting hotel guests across South Korea
By Debbie White
20th March 2019, 2:28 pm
Updated: 21st March 2019, 8:55 am
Video Player is loading.
By Debbie White
Invalid Date,
PERVERTS secretly filmed 1,600 guests in hotel rooms across South Korea – and charged voyeurs to view the footage that was streamed live online.
The covert filming was carried out in 42 rooms at 30 hotels in 10 cities, cops say.
South Korean Police
6
Tiny cameras were found hidden in a range of items inside hotel rooms, including wall sockets
AFP
6
A police officer demonstrates mini-spy cameras installed inside a hair dryer
AFP
6
Four men are accused of installing mini-spy cameras in TV set-top boxes, hair dryers or electrical outlets in 42 rooms in 30 hotels throughout South Korea. Above: cops check for the presence of spycams
Hotel guests were unaware of the secret cameras as they were hidden inside hairdryer bases, digital TV boxes – and even wall sockets, according to the Cyber Investigation Department at the National Police Agency.
Perverts profited from the clandestine footage as their online site boasted more than 4,000 members, looking for sexual kicks.
And nearly 100 of them paid about £40 in monthly fees ($44.95), which enabled them to access a few “extras” including being able to replay certain live-streams whenever they wished.
Cops have arrested four people on suspicion of secretly taking videos of about 1,600 guests in hotel rooms and posting or streaming them on the internet.
A police statement accused the men of earning about 7 million won (£4,710) in total by posting or livestreaming the video on an overseas-based internet site between last November and early March.
If convicted, the two main suspects could face up to seven years in prison, according to cops.
Police said there was no sign that hotels were involved in the scandal.
Cyber investigation officers added: "There was a similar case in the past where illegal cameras were installed in (hotels) and were consistently and secretly watched.
"But this is the first time the police caught where videos were broadcast live on the internet."
Big problem with spycams in South Korea
One of the suspects allegedly installed the cameras after entering the hotels as a guest.
The other was accused of launching and managing the now-shut website.
The other two were allegedly involved in buying the spy cameras or funding the internet site's operation, according to cops.
Police said they are the first people arrested in South Korea for allegedly live-streaming the private lives of hotel guests via an overseas-based website.
The country has a big problem with spy cameras and secretive filming for voyeurs.
Two years ago, police received more than 6,400 complaints of illicit spycam filming, almost triple the number of cases reported in 2012.
The illicit distribution of videos taken by hidden cameras is a serious social problem in South Korea, says the Associated Press.
Thousands of women joined rallies in Seoul several times last year, demanding stronger government measures against the spread of such videos.
In a separate case, a Seoul district court on Thursday was reviewing whether to issue an arrest warrant for a K-pop singer on allegations he secretly filmed himself having sex with women and then shared the videos with friends in mobile group chats.
Last year, The Sun Online reported perverts had placed thousands of spy cameras in toilets and changing rooms across South Korea, to enable them to get sexual kicks from watching strangers using bathrooms.
https://hk.news.yahoo.com/歹徒賓館裝cam偷拍 放上網直播賺錢1600人中招-011359913.html
歹徒賓館裝cam偷拍 放上網直播賺錢1600人中招

on.cc 東網
12.4k 人追蹤
2019年3月21日 上午9:13
南韓警方周三(20日)表示,有不法之徒在國內30間賓館的房間內安裝攝錄鏡頭,偷拍房客一舉一動,之後直播上網供付費用戶「欣賞」,受害人數高達1600人。當局已拘捕兩名涉案人士,指偷窺活動最少收取了6000美元(約4.7萬港元)。
警方表示,涉案賓館分布在10個城市,被裝攝錄鏡頭的客房達42間。當局未有透露賓館名字,暫時也沒證據顯示出事賓館與落網疑犯共謀。警方指出,小型攝錄鏡頭通常藏於客房內的機頂盒、牆壁插頭甚至風筒內。
偷窺網站由2018年底至今合共有4000名註冊用戶,當中97人每月支付44.95美元(約350港元)以獲取額外服務,包括重播直播畫面等。當地非法拍攝問題嚴重,惟偷拍者在網上直播仍屬首次。
https://hk.news.yahoo.com/%E6%AD%B9%E5%BE%92%E8%B3%93%E9%A4%A8%E8%A3%9Dcam%E5%81%B7%E6 %8B%8D%E3%80%80%E6%94%BE%E4%B8%8A%E7%B6%B2%E7%9B%B4%E6%92%AD%E8%B3%BA%E9%8C %A21600%E4%BA%BA%E4%B8%AD%E6%8B%9B-011359913.html
The gangster hotel installed a camouflage shot.
[on.cc east net]
On.cc East Net
12.4k person tracking
March 21, 2019, 9:13 am
South Korean police said on Wednesday that there were lawless people installing video footage in the rooms of 30 hotels in China, and sneak shots of the tenants, and then live online for paying users to "appreciate", the number of victims reached 1,600. The authorities have arrested two people involved in the case and said that the voyeurism was charged at least US$6,000 (about HK$47,000).
According to the police, the hotels involved in the case are distributed in 10 cities, and 42 rooms are equipped with video footage. The authorities did not disclose the name of the hotel, and there was no evidence to show that the hotel had colluded with the arrested suspect. The police pointed out that small-sized camera lenses are usually hidden in set-top boxes, wall plugs and even air ducts in the rooms.
The voyeuristic website has a total of 4,000 registered users since the end of 2018, of which 97 pay $44.95 (about HK$350) per month for additional services, including replaying live footage. The problem of illegal shooting in the local area is serious, but the live broadcast of the sneak shot is still the first time.
CREEP SHOW Gang secretly filmed 1,600 hotel guests in their rooms with hidden cameras and live-streamed footage to online pervs
Voyeurs have been paying £40-a-month to watch unsuspecting hotel guests across South Korea
By Debbie White
20th March 2019, 2:28 pm
Updated: 21st March 2019, 8:55 am
Video Player is loading.
By Debbie White
Invalid Date,
PERVERTS secretly filmed 1,600 guests in hotel rooms across South Korea – and charged voyeurs to view the footage that was streamed live online.
The covert filming was carried out in 42 rooms at 30 hotels in 10 cities, cops say.
South Korean Police
6
Tiny cameras were found hidden in a range of items inside hotel rooms, including wall sockets
AFP
6
A police officer demonstrates mini-spy cameras installed inside a hair dryer
AFP
6
Four men are accused of installing mini-spy cameras in TV set-top boxes, hair dryers or electrical outlets in 42 rooms in 30 hotels throughout South Korea. Above: cops check for the presence of spycams
Hotel guests were unaware of the secret cameras as they were hidden inside hairdryer bases, digital TV boxes – and even wall sockets, according to the Cyber Investigation Department at the National Police Agency.
Perverts profited from the clandestine footage as their online site boasted more than 4,000 members, looking for sexual kicks.
And nearly 100 of them paid about £40 in monthly fees ($44.95), which enabled them to access a few “extras” including being able to replay certain live-streams whenever they wished.
Cops have arrested four people on suspicion of secretly taking videos of about 1,600 guests in hotel rooms and posting or streaming them on the internet.
A police statement accused the men of earning about 7 million won (£4,710) in total by posting or livestreaming the video on an overseas-based internet site between last November and early March.
If convicted, the two main suspects could face up to seven years in prison, according to cops.
Police said there was no sign that hotels were involved in the scandal.
Cyber investigation officers added: "There was a similar case in the past where illegal cameras were installed in (hotels) and were consistently and secretly watched.
"But this is the first time the police caught where videos were broadcast live on the internet."
Big problem with spycams in South Korea
One of the suspects allegedly installed the cameras after entering the hotels as a guest.
The other was accused of launching and managing the now-shut website.
The other two were allegedly involved in buying the spy cameras or funding the internet site's operation, according to cops.
Police said they are the first people arrested in South Korea for allegedly live-streaming the private lives of hotel guests via an overseas-based website.
The country has a big problem with spy cameras and secretive filming for voyeurs.
Two years ago, police received more than 6,400 complaints of illicit spycam filming, almost triple the number of cases reported in 2012.
The illicit distribution of videos taken by hidden cameras is a serious social problem in South Korea, says the Associated Press.
Thousands of women joined rallies in Seoul several times last year, demanding stronger government measures against the spread of such videos.
In a separate case, a Seoul district court on Thursday was reviewing whether to issue an arrest warrant for a K-pop singer on allegations he secretly filmed himself having sex with women and then shared the videos with friends in mobile group chats.
Last year, The Sun Online reported perverts had placed thousands of spy cameras in toilets and changing rooms across South Korea, to enable them to get sexual kicks from watching strangers using bathrooms.
https://hk.news.yahoo.com/歹徒賓館裝cam偷拍 放上網直播賺錢1600人中招-011359913.html
歹徒賓館裝cam偷拍 放上網直播賺錢1600人中招

on.cc 東網
12.4k 人追蹤
2019年3月21日 上午9:13
南韓警方周三(20日)表示,有不法之徒在國內30間賓館的房間內安裝攝錄鏡頭,偷拍房客一舉一動,之後直播上網供付費用戶「欣賞」,受害人數高達1600人。當局已拘捕兩名涉案人士,指偷窺活動最少收取了6000美元(約4.7萬港元)。
警方表示,涉案賓館分布在10個城市,被裝攝錄鏡頭的客房達42間。當局未有透露賓館名字,暫時也沒證據顯示出事賓館與落網疑犯共謀。警方指出,小型攝錄鏡頭通常藏於客房內的機頂盒、牆壁插頭甚至風筒內。
偷窺網站由2018年底至今合共有4000名註冊用戶,當中97人每月支付44.95美元(約350港元)以獲取額外服務,包括重播直播畫面等。當地非法拍攝問題嚴重,惟偷拍者在網上直播仍屬首次。
https://hk.news.yahoo.com/%E6%AD%B9%E5%BE%92%E8%B3%93%E9%A4%A8%E8%A3%9Dcam%E5%81%B7%E6 %8B%8D%E3%80%80%E6%94%BE%E4%B8%8A%E7%B6%B2%E7%9B%B4%E6%92%AD%E8%B3%BA%E9%8C %A21600%E4%BA%BA%E4%B8%AD%E6%8B%9B-011359913.html
The gangster hotel installed a camouflage shot.
[on.cc east net]
On.cc East Net
12.4k person tracking
March 21, 2019, 9:13 am
South Korean police said on Wednesday that there were lawless people installing video footage in the rooms of 30 hotels in China, and sneak shots of the tenants, and then live online for paying users to "appreciate", the number of victims reached 1,600. The authorities have arrested two people involved in the case and said that the voyeurism was charged at least US$6,000 (about HK$47,000).
According to the police, the hotels involved in the case are distributed in 10 cities, and 42 rooms are equipped with video footage. The authorities did not disclose the name of the hotel, and there was no evidence to show that the hotel had colluded with the arrested suspect. The police pointed out that small-sized camera lenses are usually hidden in set-top boxes, wall plugs and even air ducts in the rooms.
The voyeuristic website has a total of 4,000 registered users since the end of 2018, of which 97 pay $44.95 (about HK$350) per month for additional services, including replaying live footage. The problem of illegal shooting in the local area is serious, but the live broadcast of the sneak shot is still the first time.