Intrusion
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Intrusion is a form of INVASION privacy harm under the Solove taxonomy. Intrusion is defined as disturbing an individual's tranquility or solitude.
- An augmented reality game directing players onto private residential property.[1]
Additional comments
Occurrences
- A Man Gets Arrested After Facebook Translated His Post Wrongly (2017)
- AI now has the ability to identify passwords based on the sounds of the keys being pressed (8 August 2023)
- Advertising Agency Uses Geofencing to Target Women Near Abortion Centers (2017)
- Amazon Agrees to Pay $25 Million Fine to Settle Allegations Alexa Voice Assistant Violated Children’s Privacy Law (20 July 2023)
- Amazon heavily fined for invasion of privacy and insecurity (1 June 2023)
- An App Meant to Stalk Instagram Profiles (7 November 2023)
- Apple Faces Lawsuit Over AirTag Stalking Dangers (6 December 2022)
- B.C. Canadian Tire stores broke privacy laws with facial ID technology (20 April 2023)
- Charges Dismissed for Following Women with a Camera (April 2020)
- Child Safety Smartwatches Easy to Hack (2017)
- China's Massive Data Breach Reveals Growing Concerns Over Surveillance State (15 July 2022)
- Demanding employees to turn on their webcams is a human rights violation (October 2022)
- Digital Harassment After an Online Affair (November 2017)
- Discord Admits Data Breach: Info of 760K Users Sold Online (14 August 2023)
- Don't Believe Everything you Hear: How Cybercriminals Are Exploiting AI Voice Cloning (April 2023)
- F.B.I. Says Video Voyeur Hid Camera in Cruise Ship Bathroom (April 30 JL)
- FTC Will Require Microsoft to Pay $20 million over Charges it Illegally Collected Personal Information from Children without Their Parents’ Consent (5 June 2023)
- Facebook's "People You May Know" Feature (November 2017)
- Google Fails to End $5 Billion Consumer Privacy Lawsuit (1 June 2016)
- High School Teacher Taking Photos Inside Students Skirt (October 2017)
- Hunter Biden Sues IRS Over Privacy Violations (September 2023)
- Jogger Wound Up in an Ad Without Knowing (November 2017)
- Microsoft to pay $20m for child privacy violations (6 June 2023)
- Motel 6 Provided ICE with Guest Data (April 2019)
- National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) General Counsel Issues Memo on Unlawful Electronic Surveillance and Automated Management Practices (31 October 2022)
- New York police will use drones to monitor backyard parties this weekend, spurring privacy concerns (31 August 2023)
- Online Violence Against Women and Girls (October 2020)
- Paparazzi Photos of Harry and Meghan Markle’s Son (July 2020)
- Parents Testing Their Children’s DNA Online (January 2020)
- Pharmacies Shared Patient Records Without a Warrant, an Inquiry Finds (13 December 2023)
- Police Drone Over a Public Beach (July 2020)
- Police Uses Algorithm To Predict Who Might Commit a Crime (September 2020)
- Privacy Concerns over Transgender Sports Case (7 December 2023)
- Privacy at Your Doorstep: Analyzing the FTC's Legal Action Against Amazon for Ring Doorbell Privacy Violations (31 May 2023)
- Restaurant Worker Uses Contact Tracing Details to Personally Contact a Woman (May 2020)
- Ring's Privacy Failures - Spying and Harassing Through Home Cameras (May 2023)
- Ritz Customers Targeted After the Data Breach (October 2020)
- Security Camera Company Ring has Privacy Issues (31 May 2023)
- Snapchat "My AI" Chatbot and Privacy Concerns
- TikTok Tracks Users Without Their Consent (2022)
- US Says Amazon Agrees to Penalty for Alexa's Alleged Violations of Children’s Privacy Law (19 July 2023)
- Ubiquiti UniFi Router Privacy (December 2023)
- Vacuum Cleaner's Roomba 900 Home Mapping (July 2017)
- Walgreens Sells Medical Data (June 2017)
- Wisconsin Green Act to Find Troubled Veterans (April 2019)
- Woman Falsely Accused of Racism (May 2019)
- Zoom Leaking User Informaition to Strangers (April 2020)
- Zoom's AI Data Collection and Privacy Concerns
- ‘I’m in your baby’s room’: A hacker took over a baby monitor and broadcast threats, parents say (20 December 2018)
Laws and Regulations
The following laws and regulations address the Intrusion harm.
- AK. Statutes Title 11. Criminal Law § 11.61.120. Harassment in the second degree (United States, Alaska)
- CA PEN § 647 (United States, California)
- Constitution - Amendment I (United States)
- Constitution - Amendment III (United States)
- Constitution - Amendment IV (United States)
- Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 (United States)
- Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (United States)
- Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (United States)
- Junk Fax Prevention Act (United States)
- Preamble Article XIV. Protects individuals from disturbing an individual's tranquility or solitude. (United States, Massachusetts)
- Privacy Act of 1974 (United States)
- Privacy Protection Act of 1980 (United States)
- S. 665 - Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu National Blue Alert Act of 2015 (United States)
- Stored Communications Act (United States)
- Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud Abuse Prevention Act (United States)
- Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (United States)
- § 12.1-17-07.2. Distribution of intimate images without or against consent--Penalty (United States, North Dakota)
- § 1335. Violation of privacy; class A misdemeanor; class G felony (United States, Delaware)
- § 166.065. Harassment (United States, Oregon)
- § 21-6101. Breach of privacy (United States, Kansas)
- § 511. Violation of privacy (United States, Maine)
- § 76-5b-203. Distribution of an intimate image--Penalty (United States, Utah)
- §10. Right of Privacy. (United States, Montana)
- §16-11-62. Eavesdropping, surveillance, or intercepting communication which invades privacy of another; divulging private message. (United States, Georgia)
- §5. Right to Privacy. (United States, Louisiana)
- §565.252. Invasion of Privacy, Penalty. (United States, Missouri)
- §6. Searches, Seizures, Privacy and Interceptions. (United States, Illinois)
- §609.746. Interference with privacy. (United States, Minnesota)
- §637.5. Invasion of Privacy. (United States, California)
- §8. Right to Privacy. (United States, Arizona)
- §97-29-63. Coercion as a means of Indecent Filming of Another. (United States, Mississippi)
- §995.50. Right of privacy. (United States, Wisconsin)