Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Stealing someone else's video infringement?

Stealing someone else's video infringement?

Legal analysis: it belongs to tort. Without permission, strictly speaking, it is a sneak shot. Even in public, the law is intended for personal privacy. Anyone who peeps, takes candid photos, eavesdrops or spreads others' privacy shall be detained for not more than five days or fined not more than five hundred yuan; If the circumstances are serious, they shall be detained for not less than five days but not more than ten days, and may also be fined not more than 500 yuan.

Legal basis: Article 10 19 of the Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC). No organization or individual may use information technology to deface, deface or forge others' portrait rights. No portrait shall be made, used or made public without the consent of the owner of the portrait, except as otherwise provided by law. Without the consent of the portrait owner, the portrait owner shall not use or disclose the portrait of the portrait owner by publishing, copying, distributing, renting or exhibiting.