A teenager from Busan was found to be recording a woman without permission at the Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition on May 13 CST. A video depicting the victim confronting the student and reporting the incident to the staff has gained significant attention on social media platforms.

When the victim noticed the teenager aiming their phone camera at them, they immediately approached the student and demanded the deletion of the footage. Despite the student repeatedly apologizing, the victim insisted on verifying the recording. After confirming that the student had indeed captured them on camera, the victim seized the student's wrist and sought help from the on-site staff. The victim informed the staff about the unauthorized filming and the presence of the video in the recently deleted files, unable to unlock the phone due to the language barrier.

The victim expressed anger towards the student, rejecting their apologies and condemning the act of filming without consent. The victim also uploaded the video online, revealing the identity of the student through his face and school badge, which disclosed his name and school details as he was on a school trip. Many Chinese internet users used this information to uncover the student's school, social media accounts, and personal information, with some demanding restrictions on his entry into China.

In response to the incident, a representative of the student's high school in Busan clarified that the student did not film intentionally and complied with the security officer's instructions to delete the recording, resolving the issue before safely returning to Korea.

Witnesses commended the victim for handling the situation promptly and sensibly. Additionally, a separate case involving a South Korean man in his twenties being apprehended for illegally filming a woman in Japan has surfaced.