A reader corrects my assertion that "No one [Weiner] corresponded with complained" by pointing to a piece written by Gennette Cordova, the recipient of the weiner shot:
The last 36 hours have been the most confusing, anxiety-ridden hours of my life. I've watched in sheer disbelief as my name, age, location, links to any social networking site I've ever used, my old phone numbers and pictures have been passed along from stranger to stranger. My friends have received phone calls from people claiming to be old friends of mine, attempting to obtain my contact information. My siblings have received tweets that are similar in nature. I began taking steps, though not quickly enough, to remove as much personal information from the Internet as possible.
Yes but they complained because of the scandal, not because of the original interaction. That's my point, although, of course, a sitting congressman should have anticipated the publicity his correspondents would have to deal with if it all became public.