Hidden‑Camera Shock: LAYSH’s Lead Singer Goes Public in Distress
Go Eun, the emo‑queen of K‑pop duo LAYSH, recently took to Instagram to blow the whistle. She claimed that intimate photos and videos of her – shot without her consent from inside the company’s changing room and at home – had mysteriously surfaced online. The post, now deleted, read something like, “I tried not to make this a headline, but you won’t believe who’s been watching.”
In the post, Go bunks out on the intangible side of empathy, sounding like a weary drama‑star: “It’s been raining soul‑crushing comments and nonsense. I’m done pretending everything’s fine. Hidden cameras are the ultimate enemy.”
She cried out for justice, slamming the company’s security for jumping off in a stray horse‑riding‑style operation. “If a camera can’t move without my eyes, I can’t stand that.” She vowed legal action and hinted at holding the culprits accountable.
After the whirlwind, the internet lit up. Some fans jumped to accuse the agency, while others raised a skeptical eye: could this be a publicity stunt to back an adult streaming series called I Do It Alone that thrives on voyeurism? A viral video claimed the pictures might be clips from the show’s website.
When the official Instagram post popped back – a quick “No, not the agency” statement – Go pushed back even harder. “If nobody is ever going to let us get naked in a camp‑fire mash‑up, then it can’t be the show.”
Her fellow LAYSH member, Som, chimed in with a rant that looked like a scandal‑centered thread. She used screenshots of other commenters bombarding camera footage notes, titled “something to cherish forever.” Som demanded that the whole club’s privacy be respected, especially with the rumor that cameras could be built into the most personal spots like a car or a locker room.
- “Do you even need a keypad to watch this?” Som screamed, telling fans it’s a wake‑up call.
- She reminded the world that this is not a commercial blip but a brutal, real‑life violation.
- “If you see any leaked content, report it. We’ll fight the henchman’s guilty hands.”
LAYSH debuted back in May 2015, renowned for a provocative and risqué image. Still, that flamboyance does not give anyone license to torch their privacy.
In Singapore, the Personal Data Protection Act bars sneezing into strangers’ private fields. The law also brands hidden cameras that nudge over a woman’s skirt or crawl under a toilet as serious felonies. As of now, the nation has filed over five hundred menacing “modesty” complaints every year since 2015.
Recently, one former voyeur in the city was hauled into court after confessing to placing a wall‑hook cam in a Starbucks toilet in Holland Village and a similar device in his own bathroom. That case turned the spotlight off the nightlife scene and on a shrinking pool of safety.
All in all, the way Go and Som are confronting the creeping threat is a mix of travail and fearless activism. Only the legal heat and the actual trick‑savers can decide who ends up pulling the trigger. For now, fans and staff alike are watching keenly, hoping the group gets a quick yet just resolution.