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Old 08-19-2015, 10:51 PM
 
Location: Eastern Shore of Maryland
5,940 posts, read 3,569,096 times
Reputation: 5651

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Railman96 View Post
I'm certain one cop hating user on this board would throw a fit if a cop were to illegally confiscate their phone for recording in public. "He violated my rights! You don't have an expectation of privacy in public" Oh I can see it now, the irony. The hell with constitutional rights!
And he would be well within his rights, and doesn't have to be a Cop Hater. A Cop has no expectation of privacy on the street, nor is he protected by the Constitution. The person taking the pictures is.
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Old 08-19-2015, 10:54 PM
 
8,299 posts, read 3,807,833 times
Reputation: 5919
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boris347 View Post
If your out on the street or on Internet, you should be smart enough to realize there is no expectation of privacy.
You're absolutely incorrect regarding the Internet.

1) There is expectation of privacy over secure and authenticated connections.

2) This data was not stolen in transmission. It was stolen off of private servers by people who gained unauthorized access.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:02 PM
 
Location: Eastern Shore of Maryland
5,940 posts, read 3,569,096 times
Reputation: 5651
Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasLawyer2000 View Post
9th Amendment. Perhaps you should have read the Constitution more clearly when you arrived.
Seems to me, the 9th also is for limiting the Authority of the Government. How does this guarantee you Privacy from being photographed in the street? Os stop you from Video taping a Cop on the street? Do explain that.

I am not a Lawyer, but I stayed at the "Holiday Inn Express" last night
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:06 PM
 
8,299 posts, read 3,807,833 times
Reputation: 5919
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boris347 View Post
Seems to me, the 9th also is for limiting the Authority of the Government. How does this guarantee you Privacy from being photographed in the street? Os stop you from Video taping a Cop on the street? Do explain that.
I'm going to have to revert that back to you since you're the one making that claim. No one else other than you has asserted such a thing.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:09 PM
 
Location: Eastern Shore of Maryland
5,940 posts, read 3,569,096 times
Reputation: 5651
Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasLawyer2000 View Post
You're absolutely incorrect regarding the Internet.

1) There is expectation of privacy over secure and authenticated connections.

2) This data was not stolen in transmission. It was stolen off of private servers by people who gained unauthorized access.
NO, I am correct. If the people that had the data stored where there is Internet access, they should have been smart enough not to expect it would remain private. After all its not like there have never been any Hackers out there, that have cracked much tougher places, like the Department of Defense, FBI , and so on. If they expected Privacy, then clearly they where wrong, and should not have expected it.

I don't care where it was stolen from, it was still stolen by Internet from a sever hooked to the internet, so its still a part of the Internet.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:14 PM
 
8,299 posts, read 3,807,833 times
Reputation: 5919
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boris347 View Post
NO, I am correct. If the people that had the data stored where there is Internet access, they should have been smart enough not to expect it would remain private. After all its not like there have never been any Hackers out there, that have cracked much tougher places, like the Department of Defense, FBI , and so on. If they expected Privacy, then clearly they where wrong, and should not have expected it.

I don't care where it was stolen from, it was still stolen by Internet from a sever hooked to the internet, so its still a part of the Internet.
Hilarious, but you can't just make up rules as you go. The law is clear, as it preceding cases. You simply cannot access information on private computers without permission. This is true whether or not it is connected to the internet.

By your made up rules, anyone could simply hack your computer and steal your data... and it would be legal. That's nonsense.

I suggest you read more about this topic and study preceding cases. You will never succeed based on your false premise.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:22 PM
 
Location: Eastern Shore of Maryland
5,940 posts, read 3,569,096 times
Reputation: 5651
Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasLawyer2000 View Post
I'm going to have to revert that back to you since you're the one making that claim. No one else other than you has asserted such a thing.

That's funny. ... "I will get back to you on that....
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:25 PM
 
Location: Suffolk, Va
3,027 posts, read 2,519,128 times
Reputation: 1964
i think it's kind of funny, because I could be on there. I joined this site after learning about it on the Tyra Banks show, before I got pregnant with our daughter because things weren't looking good for our marriage. I talked to a couple people, but i didn't use it in the long run. I met more quality men on regular dating sites for singles. yes, I would tell them I was separated or divorce. terrible I know. anyway, i wouldn't care if my husband found out. we're different people than we were then.

just proves that nothing on the internet is 100% safe.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:32 PM
 
Location: Suffolk, Va
3,027 posts, read 2,519,128 times
Reputation: 1964
some of the posters supporting this hack are;the same ones who get mad when people use social media to ecpose racists and homophobes.
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Old 08-19-2015, 11:35 PM
 
24,488 posts, read 41,129,284 times
Reputation: 12920
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boris347 View Post
NO, I am correct. If the people that had the data stored where there is Internet access, they should have been smart enough not to expect it would remain private. After all its not like there have never been any Hackers out there, that have cracked much tougher places, like the Department of Defense, FBI , and so on. If they expected Privacy, then clearly they where wrong, and should not have expected it.

I don't care where it was stolen from, it was still stolen by Internet from a sever hooked to the internet, so its still a part of the Internet.
Legally, there's an expectation of privacy. That's all that matters. Accessing this data is a crime. You downloading it is a crime.
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