Joke Collection Website - Blessing messages - Is it a crime for a wife to invade her husband's privacy?

Is it a crime for a wife to invade her husband's privacy?

Legal analysis: Yes, the following acts can be classified as invasion of privacy: 1, disclosing a citizen's name, portrait, address and telephone number without his permission. 2, illegal intrusion, search other people's homes, or otherwise disrupt the peace of others. 3. Illegally stalking others, monitoring others' residences, installing eavesdropping equipment, secretly photographing others' private lives, and spying on others' indoor conditions. 4. Illegally spying on others' property status or publishing their property status without others' permission. 5. Privately open other people's letters, peek at other people's diaries, spy on other people's private documents and make them public. 6. Investigate and spy on other people's social relations to make them illegal. 7, interfere with other couples' sexual life or investigation. 8. Publicize other people's extramarital sex life to the public. 9, the disclosure of personal materials of citizens or open or expand the scope of disclosure. 10, collecting pure personal information that citizens are unwilling to disclose to the society.

Legal basis: Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC).

Article 1032 Natural persons have the right to privacy. No organization or individual may infringe upon the privacy rights of others by spying, harassing, exposing or making public. Privacy is the private space, private activities and private information that natural people live in peace and don't want to be known by others.

Article 103 Unless otherwise provided by law or expressly agreed by the obligee, no organization or individual may commit the following acts: (1) Interfere with the private life and peace of life of others by means of telephone, short messages, instant messaging tools, e-mails, leaflets, etc. ; (2) Entering, taking photos or peeping into other people's private spaces such as houses and hotel rooms; (3) Shooting, peeping, eavesdropping or revealing other people's private activities; (4) Shooting and peeping at other people's private parts (5) Handling other people's private information; (6) Infringe upon the privacy of others in other ways.