Seoul shares award-winning AI sex crime detection tool for free across South Korea
The technology uses 24-hour real-time monitoring to identify unlawful sexual images and videos, request their removal and block re-uploads

City officials say the first transfer agreement has been signed, opening the door for central government agencies, local governments and even private companies working for the public interest to adopt the system. Non-profit organisations based abroad may also be able to use the technology, given the cross-border nature of digital sex crimes.
Since the programme was completed in March 2023, and deployed at the Seoul Digital Sex Crime Support Centre, city authorities have added facial recognition technology and an automatic reporting system.

The technology cuts average processing time from about three hours to just six minutes, making deletion roughly 30 times faster than manual searches and more than doubling detection accuracy. As a result, the number of deletion-support cases handled by the centre jumped from 2,509 in 2022 to 15,777 in 2025.