I would love to leave all of the blinds on the windows in my home open all time, but I live in a neighborhood. The price I pay for privacy is the cost of the blinds and the action of closing them when I want privacy. When those blinds are closed, it is not in any way acceptable for anyone to come along and try to find a way to see around or through them, even if they're trying to sell something.
Nobody would be harmed in the above example any more than they would be by having their privacy violated online. Nobody is physically harmed, or had their property stolen. They wouldn't even be inconvenienced in any a way, so long as they are unaware of the intrusion.
Now for a personal experience that stuck with me and helped shaped my views on privacy:
Many years ago I walked in on my girlfriend in the bathroom, and she asked me to leave. I was going for something in the medicine cabinet and thinking she just didn't want me to see her on the toilet, I replied "I don't mind" and continued toward the cabinet. She exclaimed "But I do!".
Of course, she was right and I was wrong, because privacy is about respecting the individual's desire for it.
I would love to leave all of the blinds on the windows in my home open all time, but I live in a neighborhood. The price I pay for privacy is the cost of the blinds and the action of closing them when I want privacy. When those blinds are closed, it is not in any way acceptable for anyone to come along and try to find a way to see around or through them, even if they're trying to sell something.
Nobody would be harmed in the above example any more than they would be by having their privacy violated online. Nobody is physically harmed, or had their property stolen. They wouldn't even be inconvenienced in any a way, so long as they are unaware of the intrusion.
Now for a personal experience that stuck with me and helped shaped my views on privacy:
Many years ago I walked in on my girlfriend in the bathroom, and she asked me to leave. I was going for something in the medicine cabinet and thinking she just didn't want me to see her on the toilet, I replied "I don't mind" and continued toward the cabinet. She exclaimed "But I do!".
Of course, she was right and I was wrong, because privacy is about respecting the individual's desire for it.