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SGCulture4 days ago

Deepfakes, $50 intimate photos amid new digital regulations

The article discusses the growing issue of digital abuse, including deepfakes and the sale of intimate photos by teenagers, in Singapore. It highlights concerns about online safety and introduces the upcoming Online Safety Commission (OSC), set to launch in June 2026, which aims to hold tech companies accountable for harmful content. The piece features an interview with Stefanie Yuen Thio, a legal expert and founder of SG Her Empowerment (SHE), who shares her personal experience as a deepfake victim and discusses the challenges faced by young people in Singapore.

Synopsis: On Wednesdays, The Straits Times takes a hard look at Singapore’s social issues of the day with guests.

Imagine discovering that your face and voice have been hijacked, manipulated into a deepfake, and broadcast across the internet. It is a chilling violation of privacy, and it proves a terrifying point: no one is immune to online harms.

As digital abuse, cyberbullying, and image-based violence become increasingly normalised, the rules of engagement are also shifting. Enter the Online Safety Commission (OSC) that Singapore is officially rolling out in June 2026.

This new regulatory watchdog is designed to force tech giants to take down harmful content and give victims some respite from the harassment and bullying. But will this new law actually have the teeth to protect us? Or will trolls quickly invent new ways to circumvent it?

In this episode of In Your Opinion, assistant podcast editor Lynda Hong sits down with Ms Stefanie Yuen Thio, legal expert and founder of SG Her Empowerment (SHE). Ms Yuen Thio shares her personal ordeal as a deepfake victim and uncovers the severe realities of digital abuse facing youths in Singapore today – including the alarming normalisation of teenagers selling intimate photos for $50.

Highlights (click/tap above):

3:14 Stefanie’s personal experience surviving a deepfake attack

7:43 How “trusted flaggers” like SHE get harmful content taken down faster than standard reporting

9:57 What the new Online Safety Commission (OSC) actually means for victims of cyberbullying

24:36 The disturbing reality of youths commodifying their bodies and selling intimate photos for $50

27:22 Beyond the law: The urgent need for age assurance technology and bystander intervention

Read ST’s Opinion section: https://str.sg/w7sH

Follow Lynda Hong on LinkedIn: https://str.sg/Gm2v

Host: Lynda Hong ( lyndahong@sph.com.sg )

Produced and edited by: Teo Tong Kai

Executive producers: Danson Cheong and Lynda Hong

Follow In Your Opinion Podcast here and get notified for new episode drops:

Channel: https://str.sg/w7Qt

Apple Podcasts: https://str.sg/wukb

Spotify: https://str.sg/w7sV

Feedback to: podcast@sph.com.sg

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Read the full article at The Straits Times
Source document: Online Safety Commission (OSC)

1 reports

The Straits TimesParty-aligned🔒Center4 days ago
Deepfakes, $50 intimate photos amid new digital regulations

The article discusses the growing issue of digital abuse, including deepfakes and the sale of intimate photos by teenagers, in Singapore. It highlights concerns about online safety and introduces the upcoming Online Safety Commission (OSC), set to launch in June 2026, which aims to hold tech companies accountable for harmful content. The piece features an interview with Stefanie Yuen Thio, a legal expert and founder of SG Her Empowerment (SHE), who shares her personal experience as a deepfake victim and discusses the challenges faced by young people in Singapore.

Bias read (Center): The article presents information on digital abuse and proposed regulatory measures without overtly favoring any political stance. It includes perspectives from experts and victims but does not exhibit biased language, one-sided sourcing, or editorializing that would indicate a clear ideological lean

Official sources cited

  • government Online Safety Commission (OSC)
  • organisation SG Her Empowerment (SHE)

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentOnline Safety Commission (OSC)
  • organisationSG Her Empowerment (SHE)