#1

Her only tattoo was on her left hip. Not visible with office clothing.
And that's how we found out our manager had put cameras in the bathroom and changing room illegally.
He was dumbfounded when HE was the one who got fired and then prosecuted. 2 years probation. Company paid my female co-worker $50,000 settlement. She put it down on a house.
Turns out manager wasn't a pervert, just a control f***k. Kept logs of who used the bathroom and for how long and whether or not they were actually doing their business. Somebody found his big .XLS file with all the data in it and the notes are hilariously weird.
"10/15 - 5:17pm - Jones. Again. No phone. 9 minutes. Third time today. Speak to him about fiber.".
Technology has moved in such a way that we never really know if or when we are being watched. Privacy has almost become a thing of the past, whether online or IRL. Sometimes we suspect our activity is being monitored. Other times, we have no idea at all.
A woman named Kassy Zanjani has revealed that she lives in constant fear of being secretly filmed, after a video of her in a fast-food restaurant in Vancouver went viral.
According to her, she was approached by a man wearing sunglasses. He asked her for her name and told her she was gorgeous. Zanjani says she tried to "politely reject him" by saying she had a boyfriend.
Little did she know he was wearing a pair of Meta's Ray-Ban glasses, which were recording her the entire time...
#2

Years go by and I suddenly start feeling weird when showering. Like an itch in the back of my brain or something. I kept disregarding the feeling, thinking it was ridiculous that a stranger would crawl into our attic and put something up there. I imagined a whole headquarters set up up there and laughed it off.
Eventually curiosity got the best of me, and I hoisted myself up and did my best to look directly into the hole but... Nothing. I couldn't see anything, it was too dark. I wasn't about to go into the attic myself because it was in the closet of someone else's room and that would be weird, right?
More time goes by, and long story short, one of my siblings confessed he had set up a camera up there to film me because he felt he had become obsessed with me. I'll spare the details because this is already pretty identifying, but it has royally screwed me up. Now whenever I feel like I'm being watched *I tell someone*. No matter how crazy it seems. I also refuse to use anyone else's shower until both me and my SO have inspected it.
#3

Turns out he had been secretly filming the whole office for a year because he thought one of my coworkers was faking a serious injury and he was trying to catch her walking on her broken foot and when that plan failed, he kept looking for something else to use against her.... and when that failed, he came to my desk after she left one evening and pointed to this odd box in the back of the room and explained that it was actually a camera and why he had installed it and told everyone it was a temperature sensor...and then asked for dirt on said coworker. I was shocked.I stuttered something about her being the best employee there and that I needed to take my break and got out of there. Warned the coworker and then started job hunting.
The man later uploaded the video to Instagram and TikTok, where it was viewed more than 30,000 times within the space of a week. Zanjani only found out when a friend spotted it and alerted her.
"Zanjani's friend found the video among more than 100 on the man's social channels featuring young women, nearly all of whom reveal their name when he introduces himself and makes a pass," CBC News reported. "In at least one instance, he asks whether the woman lives in the area."
Zanjani is among a growing number of women who say they've fallen victim to being filmed without their consent or knowledge.
#4

#5

So she had one of those fake windows that just looks like a window frame that you hang on the wall. It had some little plants and stuff on it. When the light went out she happened to look over at it and saw a small red light. Knowing it shouldn't be there she went and pulled out a small hidden camera.
She left it on the kitchen table that night and the next morning it was gone and no one ever said anything.
Eventually we learned (they told us) that they thought that I might be one of the government people who were spying on them.
Short background: They met because he (he was a step dad to gf) was her d**g d****r. They continued to do sp**d and were extremely paranoid.
That night they told me I'd gained their trust and told me all about the people watching them. Apparently they hid in the bushes and watched their house. They were secretly dr*gging them as a government test on poor people. Also, some of them were ninjas that couldn't always be seen. They were concerned I was one of them initially.
Tl;dr Gf's parents thought I was an invisible ninja sent to get in their good graces so I could test experimental d***s on them.
#6

One injury law firm in Chicago has revealed that there has been an increasing number of legal cases involving people being recorded without their consent, especially in private or non-public areas like restrooms.
"Victims of non-consensual recordings often experience emotional distress, trauma, anxiety, PTSD, issues related to the violation of trust and other consequences tied to such unauthorized intrusions," the legal firm's site notes.
However, the firm's experts say you absolutely have legal protection if it ever happens to you...
#7

I confronted her about it, she said she was playing with the webcam and had to leave in a hurry. But you can clearly see on the video that she carefully placed the laptop to look right at the couch and was in no rush. She maintains that I'm the a*****e for accusing her of such an atrocious thing.
#8

I went to college with a guy who dropped out after two quarters, and never deleted him from my facebook friends. A few months ago, he messages me for my email address and sends over a bunch of pictures of me and my now-husband back from college, as well as some funny videos and stuff.
I was like, "oh wow! thanks! Were you just holding onto these all this time, ha ha ha"
and he tells me that he just found an old hard drive that had stuff from then on it, and since me and now-husband are married and stuff we'd probably like having the photos. Oh, and don't worry, he deleted the videos of the two of us having intimate time.
I was like uh..... how did you have those kind of videos of us?
Apparently me and now-husband didn't always lock his dorm room door before knocking boots, and as he was now-husband's neighbor, he would just crack the door open and video tape us. But don't worry, he now realizes that wasn't cool to do and deleted the videos.
Yup. That happened.
#9

TL;DR super haxxor doesn't like my taste in YouTube videos.
The experts say that if you ever spot a hidden recording device, take pictures of it but do not touch or remove the camera.
"Leave that part to the police," they advise. "Or if you learn that others have been recorded and that the police are actively investigating such violations at a place that you know you have visited, you should also contact them right away, even if you’re not 100% sure that your privacy rights were violated."
The firm warns that hidden cameras placed in private or semi-private areas — such as restroom facilities — can violate multiple state and federal laws and carry serious penalties.
#10

#11
I found a new place to live after that. And stopped talking to my parents for a long while.
#12
His parents caught on and put up a deer camera hidden behind something on the wall. We some how found it while looking for a ping pong ball and we looked at all the pictures and could not stop laughing because obviously we were under the influence. For the rest of the school year we would just delete all the pictures except for one of his dad looking into the camera to making sure it was well hidden.
The Consumer Shield legal platform, which connects victims with lawyers across the United States, notes that laws for video recording are fairly similar across all 50 states:
"Generally, if someone wants to record you in public, they can — but they may not record you on your own property or where you could reasonably expect privacy."
It adds, though, that there are cases where it is legal to record someone — for example, in a public business like a coffee shop. Here, it could be permissible for another guest to record your conversation.
#13

Later on my dad had left the program's window open so I found out that he had all my passwords to everything, copies of every email and instant message I had sent/received, a video of everything I did, keystrokes, plus more... it was really uncomfortable. The company claims it's mainly some kind of pedophile deterrent, but the extent that my dad used it to track my activity freaked me out, especially when I was in h**h school. There wasn't any reason for him to be tracking me so closely, either--I was a good kid and knew how to smartly navigate online even when I was fairly young, so there definitely wasn't need for concern about that kind of stuff.
In the FAQ for the program on their website it warns that using it for "adult children" (among other people) could get you in trouble with the law, and although I was in middle school when it started, he never stopped using it until he had to, since I set up my new laptop myself so he couldn't install it here. I don't think he ever realized that I knew he was tracking me the whole time.
It's definitely not as severe as some other people's experiences since some people interpret it as overprotective parenting... but spector pro is sketchy as f**k to me.
#14
#15

Similarly, you can be recorded at your place of work.
"Usually, workplaces have the right to record you. For example, they might monitor work-related phone calls or emails using work equipment. Unless you were recorded for non-business purposes, you may not be able to sue your employer for recording you."
#16
After a month of not being able to walk and go to school we took up going to the hospital where doctors would prescribe him a bunch of medication and claim he had a ton of diseases.
2 months of being in the hospital pass by and he finally comes back home, and it was about a week after he came back we bought him a walker and even worse was the fact that he couldn't go down our 2 flights of stairs in our house. I was taking a shower one day when heard a massive crash outside my door, I got out and checked on it only to find that my brother had had fallen face first into the wall with a white board and a couple of boxes. He had a few head wounds and luckily nothing to severe.
That same weem my Dad had set up a secret camera lodged into a piece of our furniture looking out towards our living room. The tape recorded about 1 and 30 minutes of my Brother walking normally and doing all the things he would normally do and when my dad came up stairs he would fake not being able to walk. When my father checked the tapes he was pissed. He showed my mom when she got home and he wanted to wake up my brother and give him a good yelling to quit the act. My mom had told him not to, in hopes that if there was in fact something crazy driving him to do all these things he would come out and say it so we could help him out.
My dad showed my brother the video and within a month after seeing the video he went back to school.
It took him 5 years after to tell us all that the reason he did all these things was because he was being bullied a ton at school for his weight problems.
All I can say about him now is that the Bullying he received in middle school did take a toll on his academic record and he himself feels that he struggles with making connections with people. He did however lose 70 pounds, become a manager at a chain restaurant, and he is on his last month paying for his culinary education. I'm proud of him and in all I'm very happy he never chose to take his own life.
Also that if I'm ever doing anything I wonder if my Dad may be watching me.
#17

#18
They're f*****g insane; they treated her like a s***e and then begged her not to leave when she went to move in with us. her father thought that women for "evil" for "eating the fruit in the garden of eden".
We only found out after my tech-savvy roommate went through and found the spyware, removed it. She actually has a new computer now, and her parents are far far away, so everything is good.
If you feel your rights have been violated, besides calling the police, you should also consider contacting a lawyer.
"Beyond criminal prosecution, victims of such invasions of privacy may pursue civil legal claims seeking monetary damages for invasion of privacy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and other harms caused by this illegal conduct," explains the Sexner Injury Lawyers LLC site.
Have you ever been recorded without your consent or knowledge? How did you find out, and what did you do? Let us know all about it in the comments section below...
#19
He'd been through some s**t, ended up with a nasty m**h habit and decided it'd be nice to watch the teenage hotties in his class go potty. So he rigged up cameras in the bathroom and wired them to his school computer. He ended up getting caught when the whole school network bogged down due to the software he was running. Ended up doing a couple years in prison, or so the web tells me.
#20
About 8 years ago, I shared a first-floor apartment in a converted one-family house with 2 roommates, and the landlord lived above us. Almost immediately after we moved in, I started noticing that whenever I got ready to take a shower, I would hear the sound of someone getting up above me followed by footsteps in the general direction of our bathroom. At first I chalked it up to coincidence, but I tested the theory by "fake-showering," wherein I would get undressed and put a towel on like I was about to take a shower, and the footsteps would immediately start. If I didn't go to the bathroom, they would stop. CREEPY. I had my male roommate, who was knowledgeable in construction, inspect every corner of my bedroom (which had been converted from a dining room) for cameras, recording devices, etc. He didn't find anything suspicious, but did find the fact that I had mirrors in the built-ins, a little disconcerting b/c there was no way to find out what was behind them. Again, CREEPY.
One night I'm home alone and I hear a loud crash. After some searching, I find that the light fixture installed IN our shower (as in... pretend you're showering, now look up. That's where the light was instead of in the middle of the ceiling) had fallen and crashed into the bathtub. Of course I start freaking out, then getting sick to my stomach b/c I think "This is it... I'm going to find a camera and my worst fear will be confirmed." No camera. Nothing in the broken light fixture. Roommate comes home inspects the broken pieces and the fixture still in the wall and finds nothing suspicious (just a very poor DIY electrical job).
April rolls around and we've had the heat off for several weeks, but can still hear the radiators ticking and heat is still coming out. Roommate inspects and it turns out we've been paying for the basement tenant's gas and electric since she moved in. We go upstairs to confront the landlord and notice that one of his computer monitors is displaying live feed of our front porch. Ok, so maybe it's a security measure--or maybe he's keeping track of our movements. A few days later I go outside and pretend to make a phone call while I walk the perimeter of the house. I'm meandering around the yard and the front porch, stopping every so often so it looks like I'm picking at a piece of paint or playing with a window pane, but I'm really looking for cameras. I found one in the yard attached to the flood lights on our back porch and another by the steps to the basement apartment. Again, could be a security measure. Bust still CREEPY.
There were a bunch of other little things that on their own weren't alarming, but when put together seemed *very* suspicious. Like the time the landlord asked my female roommate about a guy I was seeing, someone who was in the apt. once when our landlord was away for the weekend. Or the time he nearly demanded that we use the yard more often, saying that he got the grill for us to use, why don't we ever use it, why don't we ever go back there and "lay in the sun like young kids are supposed to do." Or the time he came downstairs to ask if we needed anything only a few minutes after we realized we were out of eggs, but after we'd already started mixing brownie batter. There were just too many coincidences with that creeper and we ended up moving out 2 months early. To this day I'm still convinced that he had cameras set up.


