Comment by calibas
16 hours ago
Huge flaw in his reasoning:
> Group chats, dating apps, emails — or in Byron’s and Cabot’s case, simply being in public with no intention to be filmed — should not be subject to public judgement.
He's equating things where you should have an expectation of privacy with "simply" cheating on one's spouse in a public space.
And why does intention matter? People should have expectations of privacy in public spaces if they don't intend to be seen? Is that really the claim here?
If you have an expectation of privacy in any of those, you are mistaken.
One of the first things I told my daughter when I gave her her first cell phone is never text anything you don’t want someone to screenshot and send it to everyone you know.
Sure enough, literally yesterday she got a text from friend A asking if my daughter liked her more than friend B.
Friend B sent the message from friend A’s phone as a test.
The year is 2025 and sadly the only place I have an expectation of privacy anymore is inside my own house verbally speaking to my family. And even then I expect my location to be available to more people than I care to admit.