Search for: "Hackes v. Hackes" Results 81 - 100 of 3,227
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25 May 2011, 2:01 am by Adam Wagner
Human rights roundup: More cuts, phone-hacking and pets’ rights Rooney, Coulson and Hague scandals reveal the need for more, not less, press protection Filed under: Art. 8 | Right to Privacy/Family, Case comments, Criminal, Media, Police Tagged: phone hacking [read post]
12 Feb 2011, 5:44 am by INFORRM
IHC 40/11 Gray & anr v Newsgroup Newspapers Ltd IHC 41/11 Coogan & anr v Same IHC 72/11 Same v Same IHC 73/11 Same v Same These concern the “phone hacking” cases of Andy Gray and Steve Coogan and are applications for disclosure against Glenn Mulcaire which were adjourned from 18 January 2011. [read post]
25 May 2011, 5:47 pm by INFORRM
Chris Bryant MP, Brendan Montague, Brian Paddick and Lord Prescott – all of whom claim to have had their phones hacked by the newspaper – claim that their article 8 rights were violated by the Met’s refusal to investigate whether their phones had been hacked, despite allegedly having information that they may had been. [read post]
15 Dec 2014, 6:28 am
As you may recall, in December of 2013 Target was the victimof a “major hack” of credit and debit card data. [read post]
8 Jul 2011, 10:10 am
However the CPS guidance quotes "DPP v McKeown, DPP v Jones ([1997] 2Cr App R, 155, HL at page 163) [where] Lord Hoffman defined a computer as "a device for storing, processing and retrieving information". [read post]
21 Aug 2008, 5:01 pm
v=VIDEOID You’ll find a string of characters where VIDEOID is. [read post]
30 Dec 2018, 9:35 am by Katitza Rodriguez
Argentina: Dangerous Attempts to Legalize Indiscriminate Government Hacking 2018 saw dangerous legislative efforts to authorize the unregulated use of government hacking by both the city of Buenos Aires and at the federal level. [read post]
16 Sep 2016, 8:25 am by Susan Hennessey
This kind of vast expansion of government mass hacking and surveillance is clearly a policy decision. [read post]
12 Mar 2010, 6:15 am by Hunton & Williams LLP
  The nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center (“ITRC”) tracks breaches involving five categories of data loss: (i) “data on the move,” such as lost laptops; (ii) accidental exposure; (iii) insider theft; (iv) losses involving subcontractors; and (v) hacking. [read post]