On December 24, 2024, media reports revealed an incident from November in Beijing involving a woman, referred to under the pseudonym Xiaoli, who went to a massage parlor for a full-body nude spa service.

To her shock, she discovered that her nude massage session had been secretly filmed by the owner and shared on the owner’s social media.
The video included Xiaoli’s private areas, such as her buttocks, without any pixelation or editing to obscure them.

Xiaoli expressed extreme anger over the incident, emphasizing that the secret recording was done without her consent. When confronted, the owner defended the act, claiming the video was only intended for promotional purposes.


Even more appalling, the owner’s social media was found to contain dozens of similar nude or semi-nude massage videos of other female customers.
After Xiaoli demanded the video of her be taken down, the owner eventually
agreed but on the condition that Xiar te her negative review of the
establishment. Xiaoli firmly refused hand this demand.


The incident sparked outrage online. Some netizens commented, “This is lawlessness! Violating customer privacy so brazenly-does the owner even understand that this is illegal? How can she live with herself?”


Others said, “This isn’t promotion-it’s outright privacy invasion! If this isn’t severely punished, who would dare to visit massage parlors in the future? Justice must be served for Xiaoli!”

So, did the owner’s actions violate Xiaoli’s privacy rights?
The owner’s actions clearly violated Xiaoli’s privacy rights. Filming and publicly sharing Xiaoli’s nude video without her consent constitutes a severe infringement on her personal privacy.


Under Chinese law, filming and publicly sharing private parts of a person without their consent is a violation of personal privacy and carries legal consequences,