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Fitting-room sex video sparks ethical and legal debate

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2015-07-20 08:53China Daily Editor: Si Huan
People take photos in front of a Uniqlo outlet in Sanlitun, Beijing, on July 15 after a sex video taken in a fitting room in the store went viral online.(Photo/Weibo)

People take photos in front of a Uniqlo outlet in Sanlitun, Beijing, on July 15 after a sex video taken in a fitting room in the store went viral online.(Photo/Weibo)

In this age of ubiquitous camera-ready gadgets and instant transmission, it is not hard to make a sex video or to upload it online. But it is not every day that such a video catches national attention and creates an uproar in public discourse.

Usually it would have to involve celebrities.

But the one-minute clip that went viral on July 14 featured an anonymous couple.

What made it special was the location-a fitting room of a casualwear retailer in Beijing. This piece of information popped up on the soundtrack via the PA system.

A seemingly vast majority of opinions believe this was a marketing gimmick. Since the people in the video were not entertainers, Uniqlo, the retailer, was the only party who gained tremendous exposure through this incident.

As Uniqlo is a Japanese franchise and anti-Japanese sentiments are easily stimulated, there is little sympathy for it among the Chinese public.

Uniqlo has categorically denied any involvement.

It is presumably cooperating with the police in probing into the matter. Like most garment and apparel stores, it separates its fitting rooms by gender and allows only one person into a room at a time.

If the video was not digitally manipulated, the couple may have slipped through the guard. But then, even a home video can be easily altered.

To use the same conspiracy theory that Uniqlo planned it to ratchet up its name recognition, it would also be plausible that a competitor faked it to destroy Uniqlo's reputation. Anyone with a modicum of common sense would know that a global enterprise caught in such unethical-if not illegal-practices would face serious consequences.

The second question is the appropriateness-or rather, the lack thereof-of engaging in sex in an inappropriate space.

A fitting room, like a public toilet, is unique in that it is a private space within a public sphere. And like the public toilet, it serves a specified purpose.

So, whether out of passion or adventure, the couple in the video violated the implicit rule regarding the use of a fitting room.

Some legal experts have come forward and explained that this was not illegal, per se. I don't have the necessary knowledge to make that judgment, but I'm pretty sure having sex in a fitting room-filmed or not-is a breach of the retailer's sine qua non and, more seriously, of social norms.

Now there have been sporadic reports that the couple in question were shocked to find their intimacy made public in such a brutal manner.

They've insisted they never intended the video for public consumption.

If that is true, one possibility was their cellphone or computer was hacked.

There seems to be a consensus, at least among pundits, that whoever uploaded it was more egregious in the violation of morality and possibly the law.

It would have been a flagrant infringement of personal privacy and, as the content could be deemed pornographic in nature, spreading it, with or without the consent of the persons involved in the making of the video, would run counter to the law.

More troubling than that is the carnival-like atmosphere that surrounded the exposure of such personal privacy.

The video brought out the voyeuristic streak in many people, who avidly watched it and passed it around-and then took a moral high ground.

They denounced the maker, distributor and the possible backer of the video, rarely contemplating the possibility that the three roles could be separated and, in each case, there could be a different perpetrator and a different victim.

China's Internet, in general, looks like a teenage boy's wet dream-with numerous photos of an explicit nature plastered on any given page.

And this on legitimate websites and after rounds of government campaigns to root out online pornography.

The demand for titillation will always exist, and it depends on how and where the libido will be channeled.

In a sense, the one who had sex in a fitting room represented the public at large in that the impropriety, if not uncovered, would enhance one's feeling of bravado and, under the cloak of anonymity, would not incur much risk.

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