Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Is p-picture illegal?

Is p-picture illegal?

1.p is it illegal?

1, it is illegal to take pictures of others. You can sue or call the police. Portrait right is the right that citizens can agree or disagree with others to use their portraits. The law stipulates that the portrait of a citizen shall not be used without his consent. Portraits and documentary photographic works cannot be published or exhibited in principle, even if they are purely non-profit exhibitions, without the consent of the portrait owner. Portrait rights include citizens' ownership of their own portraits, the exclusive right to make portraits and the exclusive right to use portraits, as well as citizens' right to prohibit others from illegally using their own portraits or to damage or defile their own portraits.

2. Legal basis: Article1/kloc-0 of the Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC).

Natural persons enjoy the right to life, body, health, name, portrait, reputation, honor, privacy and marital autonomy. Legal persons and unincorporated organizations enjoy the right of name, reputation and honor.

Article 10 18

Natural persons have the right to portrait, and have the right to make, use, make public or permit others to use their own portraits according to law. Portrait is the external image of a specific natural person that can be recognized on a certain carrier through images, sculptures, paintings, etc.

Article 10 19

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.

Second, what is the punishment for malicious P-pictures?

1, fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years, criminal detention or public surveillance, and a fine;

2. If the circumstances are serious, he shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than three years but not more than ten years and fined;

3. If the circumstances are particularly serious, he shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than 10 years or life imprisonment.