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Is it illegal to expose photos of property owners?

It is illegal and violates the privacy of the parties. Victims can leave evidence to complain to the relevant departments, and the property management will be detained and punished according to the seriousness of the case.

Every citizen's privacy is protected by law. Without the consent of others, it is an infringement of others' rights and needs to bear corresponding legal responsibilities.

The right to privacy includes a citizen's right to name, portrait, address, telephone number, physical features and image of a citizen, and no one else may snoop, disclose or spread it without permission. In addition, citizens' personal activities, especially those in the house, cannot be monitored or peeped, and others cannot take photos or videos, except, of course, legally monitoring their residences.

Infringement of privacy and other civil rights and interests shall bear tort liability; The main ways to bear the responsibility are to stop the infringement, remove the obstruction, compensate the losses, apologize, eliminate the influence and restore the reputation.

Natural persons have the right of personality, such as the peace of private life and the protection of private information secrets according to law, and not being illegally occupied, known, collected, used and made public by others. Moreover, the right subject has the right to decide to what extent others can interfere in their private lives, whether to disclose their privacy to others, and the scope and extent of disclosure.

legal ground

People's Republic of China (PRC) Civil Code

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 1033

Unless otherwise provided by law or expressly agreed by the obligee, no organization or individual may commit the following acts:

(a) by telephone, SMS, instant messaging tools, e-mail, leaflets, etc. Disturb the private life of others;

(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 or peeping at the private parts of others' bodies;

(5) handling other people's private information;

(6) Infringe upon the privacy of others in other ways.