She was lying in bed, and both male and female employees regarded her as a model and pressed her from head to toe.
Unexpectedly, the massage of these naked body parts was recorded, and the boss made it into a video advertisement without authorization and sent it to a circle of friends, which was widely forwarded.
Because Ms. Wang works at the front desk, some male clients know her, so some malicious men add her WeChat, tease her online, regard her as an escort and make some excessive demands.
At this point, Ms. Wang found her boss and strongly demanded that these videos be deleted, and asked her boss to compensate her for the loss of reputation. The boss disagreed, and Ms. Wang sued the boss to the court.
Not to mention how the court will decide, do we have the right to ask the boss for compensation from the legal level?
First of all, it is her job for Ms. Wang to be a model, but the boss made a video without her permission. According to the provisions of the Law on Public Security Administration Punishment, anyone who peeks, 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.
Secondly, making images into video advertisements without my consent is an infringement on citizens' portrait rights. According to the provisions of the Civil Code, citizens have the right to portrait, and they are not allowed to use their portraits for profit without their consent.
If you do this, you will definitely pay the price.
Each of us has the right to portrait, and we should establish the consciousness of protecting our right to portrait. If we find that our videos and photos have been sent to the public media for profit, we should take up legal weapons like Ms. Wang and give ourselves a statement.