Is it illegal to expose other people's names on Tik Tok?

Tik Tok's publication of other people's names is an infringement of privacy and constitutes an illegal act of infringing on others' privacy. Generally speaking, it is not a crime for an illegal party to expose a third party on Tik Tok. Personal privacy is protected by law. If the information of a third party is exposed on Tik Tok, and its name, portrait, address, ID number and telephone number are disclosed without the permission of citizens, it is an act of infringing on the private life of others and disclosing their privacy, which is not only a violation of social morality, but also an illegal act.

The third party has the right to ask the infringer to withdraw the information and ask for an apology; If it has seriously affected a third party, it has the right to demand compensation from the infringer.

Privacy is everyone's personal right, but when privacy is violated, ask the other party to stop infringing on your privacy. If the other party is spreading your private information, invading your private life, etc. You can ask the other party to stop this behavior immediately to prevent you from suffering or expanding losses because of the other party's behavior.

After that, if the other party ignores your request, you can choose to bring a lawsuit to the court and ask the other party to implement your request and apologize. According to the Supreme People's Court's "Answers to Several Questions in the Trial of Reputation Right Cases", the injurer can apologize to you in written or oral form to help you restore your reputation and eliminate the influence. But the content must be reviewed by the people's court in advance.

Detailed provisions on apology are as follows:

1, the other party needs to help you restore your reputation and eliminate the scope of influence, which needs to be consistent with the scope of adverse effects caused by his infringement.

2. If you suffer reputation loss because of the other party's behavior, you can ask the other party to compensate for the economic loss. If the other party is required to compensate for mental damage, the court can determine the degree of mental damage compensation according to the degree of fault of the other party in the whole infringement process, how to infringe and what kind of mental damage has been caused to you.

Legal basis:

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