The court heard that Cher and his ex-girlfriend met on dating application OkCupid. They started a relationship in March 2018, when she was 18.
When they were dating, the couple had sex about four to five times.
She noticed that he would use his mobile phone to record what they did, and told him to stop doing this. However, he insisted on continuing and reassured her that the clips were for his own eyes.
She stopped objecting after that.
Around July or August that year, she discovered an upskirt video of herself on the internet. She could hear herself talking to Cher in the video.
When she logged into his Pornhub account, she discovered that he had uploaded other videos of them having sex at his home.
She then repeatedly asked him to take down the videos, but he replied that they did not show her face and that nobody would recognise her.
She broke up with him in October that year.
More than a year had passed when she asked him to remove the videos again. He did not do so and merely made them private.
By this time, though, other users had reposted the clips to their own Pornhub accounts as well as on another pornographic website. Upon her new boyfriend’s urging, the victim made a police report in June 2020.
Cher was arrested the same day.
The authorities seized his electronic devices and discovered that he had taken other upskirt videos, including of fellow passengers on an MRT train and of fellow participants at a private enrichment course called Start-Up Academy.
He had uploaded these clips on Pornhub, as well as videos of himself having sex with other women.
One of the women was blindfolded during the act and this clip was viewed more than 14,000 times until he changed the settings to “private”.
Cher admitted to uploading the clips online because he felt that each one was an “achievement”, and that he felt a thrill when watching other homemade videos on the porn site.