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Originally Posted by stevieray
we aren't talking about an inanimate object.
..and that's the rub...he trusted him with something extremely personal, something so personal he took his own life over it..it's up to him to make sure the probablity of "being exposed" is nil.
i can expect my job to be there tommorrow, doesn't mean it will be.
i can confide in a friend to not share personal infromation with others, and if he does, then he's a scumbag..but I learn on super sensitive matters, it's up to me to make sure it deosn't happen again...didn't the kid unplug the webcam? he was aware of the risk.
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Expectation does not equal reality. You can have an expectation and not have it met - that doesn't nullify the expectation. In this case, he had by definition, a reasonable expectation for privacy. Just because his privacy was violated doesn't mean that expectation didn't or doesn't exist.