Exactly. Also in the US the Right to Privacy is largely established through Supreme Court decisions and penumbrances of amendments that deal largely with medical information and sexual activity. (Griswold v. Connecticut, Roe v. Wade, and Lawrence v. Texas, for who think Roe v. Wade is only about abortion) But in Nerve it's shown as a malicious abuse of publicly shared information, but even in Parks & Rec data-mining was shown as, although not legally wrong, ethically wrong and morally suspect.
Also yes, The Net is almost quaint in its vision of the Internet, and the idea that Pizza.com would be available as a domain even in 1995. :)
RE: Nerve: Anonymity, Consequence and Dunbar’s Number