Split image showing ethical research on one side and a concerning surveillance concept on the other, representing the fine line between research and stalking

The rise of social media monitoring tools — including anonymous viewer tools like Insnoop — has blurred the line between legitimate research and invasive surveillance. This nuanced guide helps you understand where that line is.

Defining the Spectrum

Online information gathering isn’t binary — it exists on a spectrum:

Clearly Legitimate

  • A journalist researching a public official’s public social posts
  • A marketer monitoring a competitor’s public Instagram stories
  • An HR professional reviewing a job candidate’s public LinkedIn profile
  • A parent checking their minor child’s public social presence

Gray Area

  • Monitoring an ex-partner’s public social media activity
  • Tracking a private individual’s daily routine via public posts
  • Aggregating public information to build detailed profiles of individuals
  • Using anonymous tools to view content specifically to avoid the subject’s awareness

Clearly Problematic

  • Systematically tracking an individual’s location via social media
  • Compiling dossiers on private individuals for intimidation or coercion
  • Coordinating with others to monitor and harass a target
  • Any monitoring activity that causes the subject fear or distress

The Legal Framework for Digital Stalking

Most jurisdictions have updated their stalking laws to cover digital behavior. In the United States, cyberstalking is covered under the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) and various state statutes. Key elements that typically define illegal stalking include:

  • A pattern of conduct (not a one-time action)
  • Intent to threaten, intimidate, or harm
  • Causing the target reasonable fear

Simply viewing someone’s public social media content once or occasionally rarely meets these thresholds. However, obsessive monitoring — even of public content — can cross into stalking territory when combined with other contact or harassment.

Using Anonymous Tools Ethically

Anonymous viewer tools like Insnoop sit in an ethically complex space. The same tool used by a marketer for legitimate competitive research is also used by someone obsessively monitoring an ex. The tool is neutral; the intent is what matters.

Questions to ask yourself before using an anonymous viewer tool:

  1. Would you be comfortable telling the person you’re viewing their content? If yes, there’s likely no issue. If the answer makes you uncomfortable, examine why.
  2. Is the purpose research/professional, or is it emotionally driven surveillance?
  3. Are you viewing occasionally or obsessively?
  4. Would your behavior cause the person distress if they knew?

The Ethics of “Public” Content

A common defense of social media monitoring is: “It’s public, so anyone can see it.” This is true legally but misses an ethical dimension.

When people post public content, they typically envision their followers or general audience seeing it — not being systematically monitored by a specific individual using anonymous tools. The implicit social contract of public posting includes some notion of proportionality: knowing something is technically accessible doesn’t automatically make any use of it appropriate.

Where Platforms Are Drawing the Line

In 2026, major platforms are increasingly using automated systems to detect:

  • Abnormal viewing patterns from single accounts
  • Bot-like behavior in story or profile visiting
  • Coordinated inauthentic behavior across networks

This doesn’t catch casual anonymous viewing, but it does flag systematic, high-volume monitoring.

FAQ

Is it stalking to check someone’s Instagram stories occasionally?

Generally no, especially for public accounts. Occasional viewing of public content without any accompanying harassment is not typically considered stalking.

What if the person has blocked me but I use a tool to view their stories anyway?

This is a significant ethical red flag. If someone has blocked you, they have expressed a desire for you not to see their content. Using an anonymous tool to circumvent this crosses an important ethical boundary and could potentially support a harassment claim.

Are there support resources if I think I’m being stalked online?

Yes. The National Center for Victims of Crime’s Stalking Prevention, Awareness, and Resource Center (SPARC) provides resources at victimsofcrime.org. In emergencies, contact local law enforcement.


This article was written by the Silicon Valley Times Technology Editorial Team. All statistics are sourced from publicly available research, Statista, and Google Trends data.

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