invasion of privacy
Noun: - The wrongful intrusion by individuals or the government into private affairs with which the public has no concern: This refers to a violation of a person's right to be left alone and to keep personal matters confidential. It is often a legal concept involving an unjustified intrusion into one's private life.
This term is typically used in legal, journalistic, and everyday contexts to describe situations where someone's private information or personal space is improperly accessed, disclosed, or interfered with. It implies a breach of ethical or legal boundaries.
- The paparazzi's constant photography of the celebrity's children was considered a clear invasion of privacy.
- Unauthorized access to an employee's personal emails by the employer can constitute an invasion of privacy.
- Many people feel that excessive surveillance cameras in public spaces are an invasion of privacy.
- "to constitute an invasion of privacy": to be legally or ethically considered as such.
- Publishing those private letters without consent could constitute an invasion of privacy.
- "gross invasion of privacy": an especially severe or blatant violation.
- Hacking into someone's medical records is a gross invasion of privacy.
- Privacy invasion (noun phrase): A less common variant with the same meaning.
- The lawsuit was filed over a serious privacy invasion.
- Invade privacy (verb phrase): The action of committing such an intrusion.
- It is illegal for companies to invade the privacy of their customers.
- Breach of confidentiality: Unauthorized disclosure of private information.
- Intrusion upon seclusion: A specific legal term for the wrongful invasion of one's private affairs or solitude.
- Violation of privacy: A general term for any act that infringes upon personal privacy.
- Right to privacy: The legal or moral principle that individuals have a right to personal autonomy and control over their personal information.
- The new law aims to strengthen the citizen's right to privacy.
- Expectation of privacy: A legal concept regarding whether a person has a reasonable expectation that a place or activity is private.
- You have a lower expectation of privacy when posting on public social media.
This is a compound noun treated as a single lexical unit. It is a formal term often encountered in discussions about law, ethics, technology, and media.
- the wrongful intrusion by individuals or the government into private affairs with which the public has no concern