Army sniper gets £100k after MoD blew his cover – Daily Telegraph

Posted May 22nd, 2013 in anonymity, armed forces, compensation, data protection, disclosure, news, privacy by sally

“An Army sniper has been paid £100,000 in compensation after being driven into hiding when Ministry of Defence officials blew his cover.”

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Daily Telegraph, 22nd May 2013

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Distress must be directly linked to data breach for consumers to claim compensation, rules Court of Appeal – OUT-LAW.com

Posted May 22nd, 2013 in appeals, compensation, data protection, news, privacy by sally

“Businesses do not have to pay compensation for causing distress to consumers if they break data protection laws unless the distress suffered by consumers is linked to the breach itself, the Court of Appeal has ruled.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 22nd May 2013

Source: www.out-law.com

Disarray as DPP contradicts new guidance on naming of suspects – The Independent

“Controversial plans to protect the identity of suspects arrested by police were in disarray last night after the Director of Public Prosecutions called for more ‘wriggle room’ to name suspects before they were charged.”

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The Independent, 21st May 2013

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Newspaper royal charter plans are ‘bizarre’, says Liberty director – The Guardian

Posted May 22nd, 2013 in charters, damages, fines, inquiries, media, news, ombudsmen, privacy, professional conduct by sally

“A key adviser to the Leveson report, the civil rights campaigner Shami Chakrabarti, has hit out against politicians and newspaper barons, accusing them of letting down the public over promises to set up a new press watchdog.”

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The Guardian, 21st May 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Public has right to know Boris Johnson fathered child during affair, court rules – The Guardian

Posted May 21st, 2013 in appeals, injunctions, media, news, paternity, privacy, public interest by sally

“The public has a right to know that Boris Johnson had an extramarital affair with a woman who later gave birth to their daughter, the appeal court has ruled.”

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The Guardian, 21st May 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

OFT issues warning over personalised pricing transparency – OUT-LAW.com

“Businesses must be more transparent about the way they collect information about consumers in order to offer personalised prices for goods and services online, the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) has said.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 20th May 2013

Source: www.out-law.com

Consent should be needed for anonymised data sharing to be lawful, say campaigners – OUT-LAW.com

Posted May 15th, 2013 in consent, data protection, EC law, internet, news, privacy, telecommunications by sally

“Businesses should have to ask for individuals’ consent before sharing anonymised personal data with third parties, digital rights campaigners have said.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 15th May 2013

Source: www.out-law.com

Judge bars affair revenge naked pictures – Daily Telegraph

Posted May 14th, 2013 in injunctions, news, photography, privacy by sally

“A married woman has won the backing of a High Court judge to stop naked photographs of her being distributed by the man with whom she was having an affair and by his furious girlfriend.”

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Daily Telegraph, 13th May 2013

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Aberystwyth doctor six-month ban for ‘flirting’ texts – BBC News

“A doctor who worked at Aberystwyth’s Bronglais hospital has been struck off for six months after sending flirtatious texts messages.”

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BBC News, 10th May 2013

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Panorama breached Ofcom code with privacy breach – Daily Telegraph

Posted May 8th, 2013 in anonymity, gambling, media, news, privacy by sally

“An edition of BBC1’s Panorama has breached the Ofcom code after a man who was supposed to remain anonymous was identified by his friends.”

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Daily Telegraph, 7th May 2013

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Teacher wins right to have dropped allegation removed from criminal record checks – The Independent

“A police force unlawfully infringed a physical education teacher’s human rights by refusing to remove detail of an 18-year-old woman’s harassment allegation from a ‘criminal record certificate’ available to potential employers, a High Court judge has ruled.”

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The Independent, 22nd April 2013

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Home Office faces legal action unless it reveals details of ‘Snooper’s charter’ – Daily Telegraph

“The Home Office is facing legal action unless it reveals key details of its so-called Snooper’s Charter.”

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Daily Telegraph, 20th April 2013

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

A history of violence: is Clare’s Law working? – The Guardian

Posted April 22nd, 2013 in criminal records, disclosure, domestic violence, murder, news, privacy by sally

“When Clare Wood was murdered by her ex-boyfriend, a scheme was set up to allow women to see details of their partner’s violent past. Six months on, Steve Boggan finds out if ‘Clare’s Law’ is working.”

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The Guardian, 21st April 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

The changing Face(book) of family law – New Law Journal

Posted April 16th, 2013 in disclosure, divorce, internet, jurisdiction, news, privacy by sally

“Research carried out by Divorce-Online in 2012 highlights the huge significance that social media now has to family law. The study found that one in three divorce petitions in the UK list Facebook as a contributing factor, with flirtatious e-mails and messages sent on the site being one of the most commonly cited examples of unreasonable behaviour. Office romances and affairs that took months or even years to develop in the real world can now happen almost instantaneously on Facebook and Twitter. People can connect and become ‘friends’ even if they have only met once or twice, and social media sites provide an easy forum for couples to inadvertently arouse the suspicions of their partners.”

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New Law Journal, 12th April 2013

Source: www.newlawjournal.co.uk

Data protection law is in danger of lagging behind technological change – The Guardian

Posted April 12th, 2013 in anonymity, data protection, news, privacy by sally

“Data processing practices are evolving faster than the law can adapt to them, according to a senior British lawyer at an international law firm specialising in data protection.”

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The Guardian, 12th April 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Yes, suspects are sometimes innocent – but secret arrests are not the answer – The Guardian

Posted April 10th, 2013 in contempt of court, damages, judiciary, media, news, privacy by sally

“Senior judges support a blanket ban on naming defendants, but public must understand there can be smoke without fire.”

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The Guardian, 10th April 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Individuals’ consent ‘almost always’ required by firms when using personal data in big data projects centred on profiling, says watchdog – OUT-LAW.com

Posted April 10th, 2013 in consent, data protection, EC law, news, privacy by sally

“Organisations ‘almost always’ require individuals’ ‘free, specific, informed and unambiguous ‘opt-in’ consent’ in order to make use of personal data they have previously collected in ‘big data’ projects that involve analysing or predicting the ‘personal preferences, behaviour and attitudes of individual customers’, an EU privacy watchdog has said.”

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OUT-LAW.com, 9th April 2013

Source: www.out-law.com

Britain seeks opt-out of new European social media privacy laws – The Guardian

Posted April 5th, 2013 in data protection, EC law, internet, news, privacy, regulations by sally

“‘Right to be forgotten’ laws, giving users – rather than services such as Facebook – control of personal data will save billions of euros and thickets of red tape. So why is Britain resisting?”

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The Guardian, 4th April 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Google facing legal threat from six European countries over privacy – The Guardian

Posted April 3rd, 2013 in data protection, EC law, internet, news, privacy by sally

“Google could face fines from six European countries’ privacy regulators, including the UK and Germany, after refusing to reverse changes to its privacy policies made in March 2012.”

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The Guardian, 2nd April 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Vicky Pryce prison photographs may have breached PCC code of conduct – The Guardian

Posted March 26th, 2013 in codes of practice, complaints, media, news, photography, prisons, privacy by sally

“The Press Complaints Commission (PCC) has begun an investigation into whether newspaper photographs showing Vicky Pryce serving her prison sentence might have breached its code of conduct.”

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The Guardian, 22nd March 2013

Source: www.guardian.co.uk