South Korea enforces deepfake restrictions ahead of June 2026 local elections
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· First: 18.05.2026 04:00
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South Korea has implemented two national laws to restrict AI-generated deepfakes in political contexts ahead of its June 3, 2026 local elections, marking the first real-world application of such measures. The Public Official Election Act (Article 82-8) prohibits the creation or dissemination of synthetic audio, video, or images that are difficult to distinguish from reality within 90 days of an election, targeting content designed to influence voting outcomes. Violations carry penalties of up to 7 years imprisonment or fines between 10 million and 50 million South Korean won ($6,700–$33,500 USD). The AI Basic Act (Article 31) requires AI operators to clearly disclose AI-generated content through watermarking or labeling, with administrative fines of up to 30 million Korean won ($20,000 USD) for non-compliance. The National Police Agency (KNPA) deployed a deepfake detection tool in 2024 to support enforcement efforts. Despite these measures, threat actors continue to exploit gaps in detection and distribution speed, particularly via encrypted messaging and direct communications channels that bypass platform oversight.