“Creepy” CCTV Footage Of BLACKPINK’s Lisa Unexpectedly Exposed
A museum in Jakarta is under fire after sharing CCTV footage of BLACKPINK’s Lisa without her consent.

The clip, posted by the establishment’s official account, shows Lisa casually ordering an iced chocolate at the museum’s cafeteria. She appears relaxed and is accompanied by a female friend.

There is nothing controversial in the video itself. However, fans were quick to call out the museum for publicly releasing security camera footage.
Dude…is this from a cctv recording????? https://t.co/QbkMUpdgF8
— 🫣. (@perfectlalisa) February 19, 2026
Many argued that CCTV recordings are meant to remain confidential and should never be shared online — especially when a public figure is involved.
Please report the establishment; they cannot violate the privacy rights of our beloved Lisa. pic.twitter.com/f2IoZ6rWSx
— Bonnie⁴🧛🏻♀️/ d̶e̶a̶d̶l̶i̶n̶e̶ / 27.02🌹 (@mihhot4) February 19, 2026
So creepy. This restaurant should be banned.
— Dolita ✩*.゚ 🐥💛 (@Dolitaisme) February 19, 2026
Are we allowed to post CCTV footage like this?
— 𝐻𝓊𝓃𝒷𝒾𝑒 💜ᴬᴿᴵᴿᴬᴺᴳ⊙⊝⊜ (@bbiediiz28496) February 19, 2026
Fans accused the establishment of violating privacy rights and urged others to report the account. Some questioned whether businesses are legally allowed to post such footage at all.
It’s so easy for them to pull out CCTV footage just to expose a celebrity, yet when something actually happens, accessing CCTV is complicated and buried in bureaucracy in some places.
— Netizen via X
Gampang bgt ngebongkar cctv buat ngespil ada artis ya, padahal kalo ada kejadian apa2 buka CCTV tuh repot birokrasinya di bbrp tempat 😔 https://t.co/U09W1QYubm
— Agatha (@earthmixnation) February 19, 2026
One fan even claimed they directly asked the museum to delete the video, but their comment was allegedly removed.
This is the account that shared the CCTV footage. I already warned them, but my comment was deletedhttps://t.co/Qgy68KZ4TG
— lilbyunB (@baekkaru) February 19, 2026
While the video may seem harmless, fans point out that the issue is not what Lisa was doing — but the fact that private surveillance footage was suddenly exposed online in the first place.