Two viral videos showing a couple having sex in their private outdoor hot tub at a Hong Kong hotel have raised privacy concerns among social media users.
The videos, which were allegedly shared on facebook and whatsapp groups Several days ago, it shows a couple having sex in their private outdoor hot tub while someone else films them from above.
It is unclear when or where the videos were taken. Some social media users believe it was filmed by another guest or an employee of a hotel in North Point that offers rooms with a private hot tub on the balcony.
More from NextShark: Suspect in California church mass shooting was motivated by hatred against Taiwan, police say
In one of the viral videos, the woman is seen sitting on the edge of the jacuzzi while eating a plate of noodles with her partner’s head between her legs. The other video shows the man embracing the partially nude woman from behind her.
The person behind the camera managed to film the couple through the gap in a balcony railing.
More from NextShark: Japanese multiplication trick is the best thing you will learn in 2021
Some social media users raised concerns about the hotel’s design, noting that those staying on lower floors will not have privacy from other guests on upper floors. Others, however, called out the person filming the couple.
“It’s so cheap to secretly film them,” one user wrote.
More from NextShark: Woman filmed telling Chinese bus driver to ‘go back to China’, while in China
“Have you thought about the harm you will bring to those involved?” said another.
the Hong Kong the government approved the Crimes (Amendment) Ordinance 2021 on October 8, which covers four new crimes, including “voyeurism, unlawful recording or observation of private parts, publication of images originating from voyeurism or unlawful recording or observation of private parts, as well as publication or threat of publication of images intimate without consent, and related matters. ”
According to hong kong mediaUnder the law, anyone found exposing themselves in public could face a fine of HK$1,000 (approximately $127) and a six-month jail sentence.
More from NextShark: Dallas Police Now Investigating Asian Saloon Shooting as a Hate Crime
Posting a video showing indecent acts online, such as the case of the person who filmed the couple, is a violation of Hong Kong’s “Obscene and Indecent Articles Control Ordinance”, which carries a fine up to HK$1 million (approximately $127,421) and three years in prison.
images