Is it a crime to steal personal privacy

Legal subjective:

Theft of personal privacy may constitute the crime of illegally obtaining citizens' personal information, will be sentenced. ,Civil Code Article 1,032 natural persons have the right to privacy. No organization or individual shall infringe upon the privacy of others by prying, intruding, divulging or disclosing. Privacy is a natural person's private life peace and quiet and do not want others to know the private space, private activities, private information. Article 253 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China states that any postal worker who opens or opens mail or telegrams privately, or conceals or destroys them, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than two years or criminal detention. If a person commits the preceding offence and steals property, he shall be convicted and given a heavier punishment in accordance with the provisions of article 264 of this Law. Where a state organ or a staff member of a financial, telecommunication, transportation, education or medical unit sells or illegally provides to another person personal information of a citizen obtained by the unit in the course of performing its duties or providing its services in violation of state regulations under aggravating circumstances, the offender shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years or criminal detention, and shall be liable to a fine in addition to or in addition to a single fine. If a person steals or unlawfully obtains the above information by other means and the circumstances are serious, he or she shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of the preceding paragraph. If a unit commits a crime under the preceding two paragraphs, the unit shall be sentenced to a fine, and its directly responsible supervisors and other directly responsible persons shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of each paragraph. (1) Disclosing a citizen's name, portrait, address and telephone number without his or her permission. ,2. Unlawfully intruding into or searching another person's home, or otherwise disrupting the peace and quiet of another person's residence. Unlawful stalking of another person, surveillance of another person's residence, installation of eavesdropping devices, taking of footage of another person's private life, or prying into another person's interior. Unlawfully prying into another person's property or publicizing his or her property without his or her permission. Opening another person's letters, reading another person's diary, prying into the contents of another person's private documents, as well as making them public. Investigating and spying on another person's social relations and publicizing them illegally. 7. Interfering with the sexual life of another person's husband or wife or investigating or publicizing them. Searching a person is a violation of a citizen's right to personal freedom and the right to honor. The right to personal freedom refers to the right to have one's own body at one's disposal and under one's control, and not to be arrested, detained, searched, or violated except through legal procedures; the right to reputation refers to the right of a citizen or a legal person to receive a fair evaluation from the society on the social value of the citizen or the legal person in terms of the social value of the citizen or the legal person's own characteristics. The right to privacy, on the other hand, is the right to the secrecy of one's private life, and refers to the right of a citizen to keep private matters of the individual that he or she wishes to keep hidden and that do not jeopardize society, and not to make them public without his or her permission. Body searches are merely an infringement of a citizen's right to personal freedom and a violation of the citizen's right to reputation. Unless, of course, in the process of forcing illegal body search found that you have certain physical defects and other personal privacy situation, and will be made public, incidental violation of the right to privacy. Legal searches do not violate the law. Illegal body search is a violation of the law, the Chinese people's *** and the Constitution of the People's Republic of China, Article 37 provides that: the Chinese people's *** and the citizens of the country's personal freedom is inviolable. No citizen shall be arrested without the approval or decision of the People's Procuratorate or the decision of the People's Court, which shall be carried out by the public security organs. Unlawful detention and the unlawful deprivation or restriction of a citizen's personal freedom by other means, as well as unlawful searches of a citizen's body, are prohibited. Only for the purpose of collecting evidence of a crime and seizing the perpetrator may investigators conduct searches of the bodies, belongings, residences and other relevant places of criminal suspects as well as of persons who may be concealing criminals or evidence of crimes. To conduct a search, a search warrant must be presented to the person to be searched Article 245 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China provides that: Anyone who illegally searches another person's body or home or illegally intrudes into another person's home shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years or criminal detention. Article 5, paragraph 1, of the Law of the People's Republic of China on the Protection of Minors provides that "The State shall safeguard the inviolability of the person, property and other lawful rights and interests of minors." ,This is of course illegal, we try to refuse the cell phone APP to obtain our personal information in our daily use of cell phones.

Legal Objective:

"Chinese People's **** and State Criminal Law"

Article 253

One of the

Violation of the relevant provisions of the state, to sell or provide to others personal information of the citizens, the circumstances of seriousness, shall be sentenced to less than three years of fixed-term imprisonment or detention, and or a single fine;

the circumstances of particularly serious

Whoever sells or provides to others personal information of citizens obtained in the course of performing duties or providing services in violation of relevant state regulations shall be punished severely in accordance with the provisions of the preceding paragraph.

A person who steals or illegally obtains citizens' personal information by other means shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of the first paragraph.

If a unit commits any of the first three crimes, the unit shall be sentenced to a fine, and its directly responsible supervisors and other directly responsible persons shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of each paragraph.