No. This is personal privacy.
Criminal law protects the right to privacy. Our country’s criminal law mainly protects the right to privacy by pursuing criminal liability for violations of the right to privacy. Paragraph 1 of Article 245 of the Criminal Law stipulates: "Whoever illegally searches the body or residence of others, or illegally invades the residence of others, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years or criminal detention."
Article 240 Paragraph 1 of Article 6 stipulates: “Whoever openly insults others by violence or other methods or fabricates facts to slander others, if the circumstances are serious, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years, criminal detention, public surveillance, or deprivation of political rights.”
Article 6 Article 252 stipulates: "Whoever conceals, destroys or illegally opens other people's letters and infringes upon citizens' right to freedom of communication, if the circumstances are serious, shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than one year or criminal detention."
Article 252 Paragraph 1 of Article 13 stipulates: "Postal workers who open, conceal, or destroy mail or telegrams without permission shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than two years or criminal detention." The above provisions are all based on the spirit of the Constitution's protection of citizens' right to privacy in the criminal field. The specific extension provides the strongest criminal law protection for protecting citizens’ privacy rights.
Legal basis: Article 246 of the "Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China"
1. The "Constitution" stipulates that Article 38 of the People's Republic of China *The personal dignity of citizens of the Republic of China shall not be violated.
2. The "General Principles of the Civil Law" stipulates that Article 101 citizens and legal persons enjoy the right to reputation, and the personal dignity of citizens is protected by law. It is prohibited to use insults, slander, etc. to damage the reputations of citizens and legal persons. Personal rights include the right to privacy
3. Article 42 of the "Public Security Management Punishment Law" who commits any of the following acts shall be detained for not more than five days or fined not more than five hundred yuan; if the circumstances are more serious, Detention for not less than five days but not more than ten days, and a fine of not more than five hundred yuan may be imposed: (2) Those who openly insult others or fabricate facts to slander others; (6) Those who peeping, secretly photographing, eavesdropping, or spreading other people's privacy.
4. The Tort Liability Law stipulates that Article 2 who infringes upon civil rights and interests shall bear tort liability in accordance with this law. The civil rights and interests mentioned in this Law include the right to life, health, name, reputation, honor, portrait, privacy, marital autonomy, custody, ownership, usufruct rights, security rights, copyrights, and patent rights. , trademark exclusive rights, discovery rights, equity, inheritance rights and other personal and property rights.
5. Provisions of the "Civil Procedure Law"
Article 134: When hearing civil cases, the people's courts shall, unless they involve state secrets, personal privacy or otherwise provided by law. It should be done in public.
Article 156: The public may inspect legally effective judgments and rulings, except for content involving state secrets, commercial secrets and personal privacy.
6. The "Criminal Procedure Law" stipulates that Article 52: People's courts, people's procuratorates and public security organs have the right to collect and obtain evidence from relevant units and individuals. Relevant units and individuals should truthfully provide evidence. ...Evidence involving state secrets, commercial secrets, and personal privacy shall be kept confidential.
Article 150: Technical investigation measures must be implemented in strict accordance with the approved types of measures, applicable objects, and deadlines. Investigators shall keep confidential state secrets, commercial secrets and personal privacy that they learn during the course of taking technical investigation measures;
Article 183: The trial of first instance cases in the People's Court shall be conducted in public. However, cases involving state secrets or personal privacy shall not be heard in public; cases involving business secrets may be heard in private if the parties concerned apply for them.
The right to privacy refers to a personality right that natural persons enjoy in terms of peace of private life and the confidentiality of private information is protected in accordance with the law from illegal intrusion, knowledge, collection, use and disclosure by others. To what extent you can intervene in your own private life, you have the right to decide whether your privacy should be disclosed to others and the scope and extent of the disclosure. The right to privacy is a basic personality right.