South Korea Poll: Over 80% of Teens, Adults Fear AI Deepfake Abuse

A major poll in South Korea shows overwhelming concern among teenagers and adults about the misuse of AI for online abuse, including deepfakes. The survey found nearly 90% of teens recognize the seriousness of AI-driven cyber violence. While teen exposure to cyber abuse slightly decreased, adult exposure saw an increase. The head of the media commission emphasized the harm to human dignity and pledged government efforts to promote healthier digital platform use.

Key Points: Over 80% in South Korea Fear AI Cyber Abuse: Poll

  • 89.4% of teens see AI cyber violence as serious
  • 42.3% of teens experienced cyber abuse in 2025
  • Strangers are the most common abusers
  • Abuse occurs via texts, gaming, and social media
2 min read

Over 80 pc of South Korea's teens, adults concerned over AI-based online abuse: Poll

A South Korean poll reveals over 80% of teens and adults are seriously concerned about AI-driven online abuse like deepfakes and disinformation.

"Cyber abuse is not just an ethical issue online, but an issue that can harm people's dignity - Kim Jong-cheol"

Seoul, March 30

More than 80 per cent of South Korea's teenagers and adults expressed concerns over online abuse involving the misuse of generative artificial intelligence tools, such as the creation of deepfake videos and disinformation, a poll showed on Monday.

According to the poll conducted from September to November last year on teenagers and adults by the Korea Media and Communications Commission (KMCC), 89.4 per cent of teenagers said they recognise the seriousness of AI-driven cyber violence, while 87.6 per cent of adults said the same.

The survey was conducted on 9,296 students from fourth-grade elementary school to third-year high school, and 7,521 adults aged 19 to 69.

Teenage respondents cited the ease of creating content with AI tools as their top concern, while adults expressed fears over the potential for repeated harm from AI-generated materials.

The poll additionally showed 42.3 per cent of teenagers experienced some form of cyber abuse in 2025, down 0.5 percentage point from a year earlier. The figure for adults came to 15.8 per cent, up 2.3 percentage points over the same period.

By channel, teenagers said they were mainly exposed to cyber abuse via text messages and online gaming platforms, while adults reported similar experiences primarily through text messages or social media.

For both teenagers and adults, strangers accounted for the largest share of abusers, followed by friends, Yonhap news agency reported.

"Cyber abuse is not just an ethical issue online, but an issue that can harm people's dignity and violate the right to happiness as guaranteed by the Constitution," said KMCC Chair Kim Jong-cheol, noting the government will make efforts to promote the healthy use of digital platforms.

Online abuse is the harmful targeting of individuals or groups via digital platforms, including social media, messaging apps, and gaming sites. It includes cyberbullying, doxing, non-consensual sharing of intimate images, hate speech, stalking, and AI-driven deepfake abuse. Such behaviour causes severe psychological, social, and economic damage.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Scary numbers. The part about strangers being the main abusers is chilling. Parents in India really need to talk to their kids about online safety, especially with gaming and WhatsApp being so popular here.
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Aman W
Respectfully, while the concern is valid, the article focuses only on fear. We should also highlight the positive uses of AI and teach digital literacy. Banning tech isn't the solution; educating our youth is. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
The statistic that 42.3% of teens experienced cyber abuse is heartbreaking. We see similar trends in Indian schools and colleges. Platforms need to do more than just have reporting buttons; they need proactive moderation.
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Vikram M
Deepfake videos are the biggest threat. Imagine someone misusing it for political propaganda or to target someone personally. South Korea's survey is an eye-opener for our policymakers. Time for a 'Digital Suraksha' campaign.
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Kavya N
It's not just about laws. As a society, we need to be more responsible. Sharing a funny meme made with AI might seem harmless, but it can ruin a life. Think before you click, yaar.

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