Spungle - // I wish the Sussexes well in the future lives. However, courting the media whilst blaming the media for 'instrusion' does little to bolster their reputation at home or abroad. //
I don't know how many times I have to point this out, but here we go again.
There are some people in the world who attract fame, either as a result of what they do, or simply who they are - this makes the media interested in them, and they can, if they choose, speak to the media about aspects of their lives that they are happy to share with others.
But that does not mean that their right to a private life, and to keep things to themselves that they wish to remain secret to them, is forfeit because of their interaction with the media.
That is a fundamental difference that you clearly do not understand - interacting with the media is a choice, having your life invaded by strangers for the titivation of other strangers is not a choice.
If you won the lottery tomorrow, and chose to give an interview to the Daily Mail about your future life, that is your choice, and that is interaction with the media.
If the next day, the Mail published that you were a bully at school and made other children cry, that is invasion of privacy, and because you chose one option does not make you fair game to have your life bisected by strangers for other strangers to point and laugh at you.
Hopefully that explains the difference.