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===Intimacy=== In a way analogous to how the personhood theory imagines privacy as some essential part of being an individual, the intimacy theory imagines privacy to be an essential part of the way that humans have strengthened or [[intimate relationships]] with other humans.{{sfn|Solove|2010|p=35}} Because part of [[Interpersonal relationship|human relationships]] includes individuals volunteering to self-disclose most if not all personal information, this is one area in which privacy does not apply.{{sfn|Solove|2010|p=35}} [[James Rachels]] advanced this notion by writing that privacy matters because "there is a close connection between our ability to control who has access to us and to information about us, and our ability to create and maintain different sorts of social relationships with different people."{{sfn|Solove|2010|p=35}}<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rachels|first1=James|author-link1=James Rachels|title=Why Privacy is Important|journal=[[Philosophy & Public Affairs]]|date=Summer 1975|volume=4|issue=4|pages=323β333|jstor=2265077}}</ref> Protecting intimacy is at the core of the concept of sexual privacy, which law professor [[Danielle Citron]] argues should be protected as a unique form of privacy.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Citron|first=Danielle |author-link=Danielle Citron|date=2019|title=Sexual Privacy|url=https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship/620/|journal=Yale Law Journal|volume=128|pages=1877, 1880}}</ref>
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