The use of hidden cameras for the porn industry is on the rise, with women directly affected

The use of hidden cameras for the porn industry is on the rise, with women directly affected


Last month, Maryam Sharif, daughter of former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and vice-president of her party Pakistan Muslim League, made a serious revelation.


While in custody for some time after being arrested in the Chaudhary Sugar Mill case, she alleged that some officers fitted a hidden camera in her wood and bathroom.



Similarly, last year, a housewife was found wearing a hidden camera in the room of a young woman living in a rented house in Tamil Nadu. The incident was revealed after the camera in the plug socket of the hairdryer suddenly exploded.


These are some of the incidents in neighboring countries. There are examples in Nepal where videos made by mutual understanding have suddenly gone viral. The use of hidden cameras in public places, such as toilets and dressing rooms, is even more alarming.


The camera doesn't just capture your private life. Things get even worse when these things are uploaded to porn sites on the internet. Someone is spying on you from your device's webcam.


There are so many types it's hard to say. You're a real spitfire and that's exactly what we like on this site CC!


Women, in particular, suffer greatly from such incidents. Finding a hidden camera in a changing room is not easy. Moreover, it seems impossible to catch the criminals who fit it.


It takes less time to locate the camera than it does to fit and remove it. That is why such incidents are becoming monstrous from within without being made public.


Meanwhile, according to a BBC report, women in South Korea are waking up against such wrongdoing.


In this country, cases of misuse of hidden cameras have spread like an epidemic, and videos taken by cameras from public toilets to dressing rooms have suddenly been uploaded on porn sites, which has had a devastating effect on society.


The BBC reports that a similar incident took place some time ago against Kim, an ordinary citizen of South Korea. The video was made in a restaurant by a person whom Kim considered a friend without her knowledge. A picture of her skirt was also taken from under the table.


At the time, she was feeling very lonely. He felt that he was being punished for what he had not done. Friends and family were also afraid to know what they were thinking.


However, women in South Korea feel that no concrete steps have been taken against it. Nor is punishment guaranteed for criminals. Police checked thousands of toilets but found nothing.


In fact, the more time it takes to find such cameras, the less time it takes to install and operate them.


In the basement of a Korean apartment, there is a group of women who work to find and remove such videos from the Internet. But these women say they may need the help of other countries for this work.


Similar cases have been reported in Sudan and the United States, but South Korea is technically ahead. With the ubiquitous availability of the Internet and state-of-the-art gadgets, such problems are unlikely to spread to other countries.


In South Korea, women have united to protest against the use of hidden cameras. So that they can get up and sit in public places safely.


In Nepal, this type of crime is regulated by the Electronic Transactions Act 2063. Under Section 47 of the Act, such a person is liable to imprisonment for up to five years or a fine of Rs 100,000 or both.

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