Most behaviour around people especially strangers is learned and depends on context. The PSA by
@rinamood sets out a very strict line: never tell a SP you saw them, never approach without prior consent, and off the clock they want to be treated as civilians. That is a clear personal boundary, but it is not something guys are born knowing or can be expected to guess if it has never been said.
An entertainer (sex worker) or minor public figure cannot realistically assume nobody will ever recognize them or take a photo unless they actually say they do not want that. In the same way, if someone advertises and meets people in person, they cannot expect every client to somehow infer an unwritten rule that any eye contact or casual hello in public is out of bounds. If a provider says āplease do not approach me in public or tell me where you saw me,ā that is straightforward and easy to follow.
Where it starts to feel kind of overblown is when that very strict stance is treated as the only acceptable way to behave, and anything else is automatically labelled creepy or dangerous.
Real life is messier. Sometimes you keep seeing the same person in the wild, say on the bus and eventually you might smile and chat like any two people. That's what happened to me. Other times, as soon as eye contact happens, the worker moves away fast like you are radioactive. Both reactions exist, which is why turning one personās preference into a universal rule everyone should already ājust knowā does not really match how people actually move through the world.