They're hungry for something they know nothing about, but we, we know all too well that the price of fame is the loss of privacy.
When a show becomes a mega hit internationally, you lose a lot of privacy, you become a hider. It's not a human condition we are exposed to very often.
Like all security, privacy is hard.
This wholesale invasion of Americans’ and foreign citizens’ privacy does not contribute to our security; it puts in danger the very liberties we’re trying to protect.
Privacy isn't negotiable. It's the right of every American.
On the whole, you can have a private life and be famous. But when milestones happen in your life like having children or getting married, privacy goes out of the window.
The Corporate impulse for human uniformity instills shame at difference and, thus, the contemporary zeal for privacy.
Beauty hath no true glass, except it be in the sweet privacy of loving eyes.
I made myself into an envelope into which I could thrust my work deep, lick the flap, seal it from everybody.
No one wants their personal emails made public, and I think most people understand that and respect that privacy.
I can't bear to let all this beautiful talk go by. Everybody says. . . fantastic things. People are always putting it down as an invasion of privacy, but I think everyone should be bugged all the time. . . bugged and photographed.
Deal in our privacy with the last honesty and truth.
We seek more and more privacy, and feel more and more alienated and lonely when we get it.
If it wasn't for this person's privacy, I'd be able to talk pretty freely about this subject on a personal level. The record's about not her. It's about my struggles through years of dealing with the aftermath of lost love and longing and just mediocrity and just bad news, like life stuff. And in the [record], where the title comes from, the lyrics are actually a conversation between me and another girl, not this Emma character.
Privacy is important. Anybody who doesn't think that, they're crap. But I know I'm going to lose some of that and that's something I'll have to deal with.
Anyone who lives in Washington and has an official position viscerally understands the cost of a lack of privacy. Every dinner - especially ones with a journalist in attendance - is preceded by the mandatory, 'This is off the record. ' But everyone also knows, nothing is really 'off the record.
I don't want to write an autobiography because I would become public property with no privacy left.
You never understand how dear your privacy is until you lose it.
I don't like showing my privacy online.
With the advent of Twitter and Facebook and other social networking sites, genuine privacy can only be found by renting a private villa for a holiday. Hotels are now out of the question for my wife and I.