Selling or providing personal information to others, the seriousness of the situation, will be sentenced to less than three years of fixed-term imprisonment or detention, and or a single fine; the circumstances are particularly serious, sentenced to more than three years to less than seven years of fixed-term imprisonment, and a fine.
Today, in the age of the Internet, people often only need a cell phone to solve most of the problems in their lives. However, there are advantages and disadvantages, people no longer have any privacy, what you have purchased, what you have browsed, and where you have been, just move, are available. The sale of information has become a huge multi-industry industry chain in the illegal corners. The speed of information leakage is really staggering.
Early in 2018, health care worker Li Moumou used the convenience of his work to illegally download the personal information of newborns and pregnant women when applying for birth certificates for newborns, and trafficked it to Yang Mou, Xiao Mou and others who run the maternal and child service industry, so as to obtain benefits. As of June 2020, Li Moumou **** illegally provided 89,904 pieces of citizens' personal information, illegal profit to 56,400 yuan, in June 2020 was arrested and returned to the case.
Li Moumou in the aftermath, did not realize that their own behavior has been illegal and criminal, she single think just violated the rules of the hospital. Until she was arrested by the police, only to realize. According to the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China, the four of them should be held criminally liable for violating citizens' personal information. When the case was heard in court, the four also pleaded guilty and confessed to the crime they had committed, and apologized to the people who had leaked their information.
The four men were found guilty of violating the right to privacy by disclosing their names, likenesses, addresses and phone numbers without their permission, illegally invading or searching the homes of other people, or otherwise disturbing the peace and quiet of other people, illegally stalking other people, monitoring their homes, installing wiretapping devices, taking private footage of their private lives, or prying into their interiors, etc. The four men were found guilty of violating the right to privacy by disclosing their names, likenesses, addresses and phone numbers without their permission.
Justice may be late, but not absent.