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Is it a crime to send other people's information online?

Legal analysis

If it is an illegal act, you can report it to the police station in your jurisdiction and ask the public security organ to investigate and deal with it. You can also sue in the people's court and accuse him of violating personal privacy. It is illegal to post on the internet without others' consent, which is an infringement of others' privacy. If you profit from it or cause serious harm to others, it is a crime, and the person who constitutes a crime also needs to bear criminal responsibility. Personal privacy is a kind of personality right, which is protected by the laws of China. According to the relevant laws and regulations, natural persons have the right to privacy, and no organization or individual may invade others' privacy, nor may they invade others' privacy by spying, harassing, disclosing or making public without others' permission. Making public a citizen's name, portrait, address, ID number and telephone number without his consent is an act of infringing on his private life and revealing his privacy, which is not only a violation of social morality, but also an illegal act.

legal ground

Article 42 of the People's Republic of China (PRC) Public Security Administration Punishment Law shall be detained for less than five days or fined less than five hundred yuan for any of the following acts; If the circumstances are serious, he shall be detained for not less than five days but not more than ten days, and may also be fined not more than 500 yuan: (1) writing threatening letters or threatening the personal safety of others by other means; (2) publicly insulting others or fabricating facts to slander others; (3) fabricating facts and falsely accusing others in an attempt to subject others to criminal investigation or administrative punishment for public security; (4) Threatening, insulting, beating or retaliating against witnesses and their close relatives; (5) sending obscene, insulting, threatening or other information for many times to interfere with the normal life of others; (six) voyeurism, sneak shots, eavesdropping, spreading the privacy of others.