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... graduate of Loyola Law School.
Paparazzi and Privacy by Patrick Alach
A New California Law Places ... familial activity under circumstances in which the plaintiff had a reasonable expectation of privacy, through the use of a visual or auditory enhancing device ... Section 3294. If the plaintiff proves that the invasion of privacy was committed for a commercial purpose, the defendant shall also be subject ...
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... Washington Post’s Spencer S. Hsu reports that the Privacy Coalition, a group of major civil libertarians and ... are upset with the Department of Homeland Security’s commitment to privacy. The coalition wants to strengthen the hand of the DHS ... of travelers who take a flight or cross the border.
At issue here is an expectation from coalition members like the ALCU and Electronic Frontier ...
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Harper's reports:What sort of privacy do you expect when you send an email? As Americans increasingly rely ... Department lawyers increasingly argue that Americans have no right to privacy there—notwithstanding repeated congressional efforts to bolster ... rights. A recent case out of Oregon shows how the privacy expectation associated with emails and other Internet communications is being frittered ...
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... enjoy the benefits of personalized music, news and social networking, one has to give up the ideal of privacy. The question is how much networking is too much? Should it stop at friends commenting on other statuses, or a list of statuses in a manila folder? What private information should we make public? It seems as social networking grows, privacy - but not the expectation of it - shrinks.
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... disclosing the privacy of a library patron -- a PUBLIC library patron, no less -- where there should be no expectation of privacy where one is acting in a criminal manner.
It is not reasonable to ... of privacy in a public library. No rights are being violated if the criminal has no expectation that his criminal activity will remain private.
And just why would public libraries want to protect the ...
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Defendant and two others were found to have no reasonable expectation of privacy in a friend's house where they were seen entering the apartment, and others called police and the friend. ... United States Supreme Court. Mr. Chapman, therefore, failed to establish that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the apartment under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
"[ ...
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