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Is it illegal to infringe others' rights?

It is illegal to infringe upon the rights of others.

Tort refers to an illegal act that infringes on the personal property or intellectual property rights of others and should bear civil liability according to law. After the infringement, there is a specific relationship of civil rights and obligations between the infringer and the victim, that is, the victim has the right to claim compensation from the infringer. Civil rights and interests include personal rights and property rights such as the right to life, health, name, reputation, honor, portrait, privacy, marital autonomy, guardianship, ownership, usufructuary right, guarantee right, copyright, patent right, trademark exclusive right, discovery right, stock right and inheritance right. An illegal act in which the actor infringes upon the person, property and other legitimate rights and interests of others due to his fault, as well as other violations in which the law specifically stipulates that he should bear civil liability.

It is generally believed that tort is civil fault first, that is to say, tort destroys a certain responsibility stipulated by law, which is strictly prohibited by law; Tort is also an act that causes harm to others, and the injurer must compensate the injured person.

Whether it belongs to the rights recognized and protected by law can be divided into three situations: one is that the object of infringement belongs to the rights absolutely protected by law. This kind of rights and interests has the nature of the world, that is, everyone in the world has the obligation of non-infringement, and its obligor is not specific. Whoever infringes on such rights and interests is an infringement. For example, generally speaking, the personal rights and property rights of civil subjects are absolutely protected by law.

On the other hand, the object of infringement belongs to the object of "relative protection" by law. In other words, the law allows the actor to do harm to the object within a certain range or under certain conditions, and the law does not prohibit, condemn or even encourage such harm. Only when the actor violates these conditions will the law protect him. For example, doctors should not only remove patients from patients, but also remove some good organs or bodies of patients for the benefit of patients.

Article 1032 of the Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates that 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:

(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.