In South Korea, an insidious scourge is infiltrating women's daily lives, blurring the lines between private and public life. Its name: molka. A contraction of the Korean words "molrae" (sneak peek) ...
In South Korea, "molka" refers to filming women's bodies without their consent. Tiny spy cameras are used in public bathrooms and hotels to do this and the images are often distributed on encrypted ...
Microcameras installed in public bathrooms for surreptitious filming are an everyday concern for women. Police say the number of "illegal filming"... South Korean Women Fight Back Against Spy Cams In ...
Authorities in South Korea have arrested two men and are investigating a further two over a spycam website that live-streamed footage of hundreds of hotel guests without their knowledge. The men hid ...
On Saturday, about 22,000 women reportedly rallied in Seoul, South Korea to protest spycam porn, known as “molka.” The demonstration, which AFP reporter Hawon Jung said was the largest women’s rally ...
Seoul Milk, the leading company in the country's dairy industry, has apologized for an online advertisement that seemed to compare women to cows and showed a man secretly filming them, which some have ...
An estimated 22,000 people gathered in South Korea over the weekend to protest the country’s problem with spy cam surveillance and sexism in prosecutions, according to BuzzFeed. It was the largest ...
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