Should illegal acts such as drunk driving reveal personal information?
Generally, personal information will not be disclosed, but not all personal information can not be disclosed. It is not impossible to handle the relationship between citizens' personal privacy and public interests and find a reasonable boundary. In this regard, there are relevant laws and policies to follow, and it is not difficult for government departments to draw a clear line between necessity and non-necessity. Under the premise of not involving state and commercial secrets and not damaging personal privacy, the exposure of personal information of offenders can be increased according to law, the illegal cost can be increased, and their awareness of law-abiding can be enhanced. At the same time, it is suggested that when minors, victims and witnesses are involved, their names, addresses and other personal information can be hidden, and attention should be paid to protecting vulnerable groups. For traffic violations such as drunk driving and overloading, information such as license plate numbers can be made public, so that such violations have nowhere to hide.
Is it infringement to disclose others' personal information without permission?
It is an infringement to disclose other people's personal information without permission. The following acts can be classified as invasion of privacy:
1. Make public the name, portrait, address, ID number and telephone number of citizens without their permission.
2, illegal intrusion, search other people's homes, or otherwise disrupt the peace of others.
3. Illegally stalking others, monitoring others' residences, installing eavesdropping equipment, secretly photographing others' private lives, and spying on others' indoor conditions.
4. Illegally spying on others' property status or publishing their property status without others' permission.
5. Privately open other people's letters, peek at other people's diaries, spy on other people's private documents and make them public.
6. Investigate and spy on other people's social relations to make them illegal.
7, interfere with other couples' sexual life or investigation.
8. Publicize other people's extramarital sex life to the public.
9, the disclosure of personal materials of citizens or open or expand the scope of disclosure.
10, collecting pure personal information that citizens are unwilling to disclose to the society.
1 1. Publicize other people's secrets without permission.
In fact, although it can be seen from the above analysis that for serious illegal acts such as drunk driving, the parties can be forced to admit their illegal acts and accept punishment by disclosing personal information, in fact, there are still various disputes and application difficulties in legal practice, and it is best to consult a lawyer to solve them.