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Are we losing out privacy from short-video platforms?

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A very hungry caterpillar

Dec 01, 2020, 10:48

Earlier last month, when a young woman and a male friend were meeting up at a coffee shop in Tianjin, another man tried to chat her up and asked her for her WeChat ID.

The woman politely turned down the man's request but a few days later she got to know that a video of her at the coffee shop had been posted on a short video-sharing platform. The woman was furious as the man who had tried to chat her up had not told her he was making a video nor taken her permission before uploading the video. She left a comment under the video, asking for its removal, and even reported the matter to the platform's handlers. The account that posted the video was soon disabled.

However, this is not an isolated case. Websites dealing in short-videos are replete with accounts that post such videos showing "how to chat up women". Their purpose is to post such videos for money.

Taking a video of someone without their permission and uploading it violates someone's right to privacy, but such videos are being made and uploaded online with increasing frequency. It was only because the woman in this instance complained that the video of her was removed. What if her attention had not been drawn to the video? One just has to browse these sites to find many such videos.

Obviously, there are loopholes in the supervision of some short-video platforms, as they are uploading contents that violate other people's right to privacy.

Women need to be on the alert if a stranger tries to chat them up. If they suspect the person interacting with them might have a hidden camera somewhere, they should consider calling the police to better protect their right to privacy.

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Newtown
GhostBuster post time: 2020-12-02 21:43

This view accords with the false notion that you must have something to hide if you don't care to reveal aspects of your private life e.g. age, marrital status, income, children, educational background. A suitable reply to such unwanted attention is 介意你自己的事 . Yet it seems that in this situation people may be still arrogantly obsessed about their 'right' to film others without their permission. I suppose it offers them some relief from taking endless selfies of themselves.

GhostBuster

No! We are getting more creative than before when back then everyone admired others who had video shots!

Now the floor is open to all!

Not only the talented but those who are ordinary people in the world!

THEY COULD HAVE GREATNESS, 2!