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This bill amends laws on eavesdropping and voyeurism to include digitally altered images and recordings, increasing penalties and requiring evidence destruction.
If you create or use digital content in South Carolina, you must ensure compliance with new voyeurism laws or face increased penalties.
State
South Carolina
Bill Number
H3042
Status
Introduced
Risk Level
Medium
Category
Amendment
Last Action
Jan 14, 2025
Last Verified
May 28, 2026
Data Updated
May 28, 2026
What do these statuses mean?▼
Introduced— Filed in the legislature; not yet heard in committee
In Committee— Assigned to and being reviewed by a legislative committee
Passed— Approved by one or both chambers; awaiting further action
Signed / Enacted— Signed into law by the governor; may or may not be in effect yet
Dead / Vetoed— Vetoed, failed to pass, or session expired without action
Unknown— Status data not yet available or awaiting classification
Affected Industries
TechnologyDigital MediaLaw Enforcement
What This Means
The proposed legislation seeks to modernize South Carolina's laws on eavesdropping and voyeurism by incorporating digital technologies like generative adversarial networks. It aims to increase penalties for violations and mandates law enforcement to destroy evidence when no longer needed.
Key Provisions
Incorporates digitally altered images and recordings into voyeurism laws.
Increases penalties for violations of eavesdropping and voyeurism.
Requires law enforcement to destroy evidence when no longer needed.
Mandates notification of additional potential victims by law enforcement.
Latest Legislative Action
Referred to Committee on Judiciary
Bill Sponsors (showing 5 of 9)
Name
Role
District
Bill TaylorR
Sponsor
HD-086
Brandon GuffeyR
Sponsor
HD-048
Brian LawsonR
Sponsor
HD-030
Christopher WootenR
Sponsor
HD-069
Don ChapmanR
Sponsor
HD-008
Gilda Cobb-HunterD
Sponsor
HD-095
Hamilton GrantD
Sponsor
HD-079
Thomas PopeR
Sponsor
HD-047
Weston NewtonR
Sponsor
HD-120
Compliance Checklist
Ensure compliance with new voyeurism laws regarding digital content. Who: Businesses and individuals creating or using digital content. Penalty: Increased penalties for violations.
Implement procedures for law enforcement to destroy unnecessary evidence. Who: Law enforcement agencies. Penalty: Potential legal repercussions for non-compliance.
The bill amends Section 16-17-470 of the South Carolina Code of Laws to include provisions regarding realistic but false images and recordings created or altered using generative adversarial networks and other digital technologies. It increases penalties for violations of eavesdropping, peeping, and voyeurism laws, reflecting the evolving nature of these crimes in the digital age. Additionally, the bill mandates that law enforcement agencies destroy items that are no longer needed as evidence, which could affect how evidence is handled in cases involving digital content. The requirement for law enforcement to notify additional potential victims expands the scope of accountability and victim protection. This bill aligns with similar legislative efforts in other states to address the implications of advanced digital technologies on privacy and personal security.
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