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Privacy Rights

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National Inquirer

US customs officers have been seizing travelers' laptops, MP3 players, telephones and other electronic devices and searching them for terrorist literature, child pornography and other criminal evidence. see also: http://tinyurl.com/2bmhwn

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AP

Umpires are livid that Major League Baseball has sent investigators to their hometowns, asking neighbors questions that include whether the ump belongs to the Ku Klux Klan, beating wives, marijuana use and extravagant parties." [corporate-gov

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Yahoo News

Greece, Romania and Canada had the best records of 47 countries Privacy International surveyed. Malaysia, Russia and China ranked worst, but Great Britain and the United States also fell into the lowest-performing group of "endemic surveillance

News Link • Global Reported By Chip Saunders
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Lew Rockwell

Usually when my school foists tyrannical measures onto the student body, a mere "wesayso" will suffice. But for once, my principal has made the arduous trek out into the realm of rational discourse, so that he can lay out the case for compu

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New York Times

Will privacy sell? Ask.com is betting it will. The fourth-largest search engine company will begin a service today called AskEraser, which allows users to make their searches more private.

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dive into mark

If he lent her his computer, she might read his books. Aside from the fact that you could go to prison for many years for letting someone else read your books, the very idea shocked him at first. Like everyone, he had been taught since elementary sch

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Reuters

States have put more names of mentally ill people into a database for gun-purchase background checks, but some remain reluctant for privacy reasons. The federal government pushed to get more names into a national list of people ineligible to buy guns

WASHINGTON - A top intelligence official says it is time people in the United States changed their definition of privacy. It's a brave new world.

News Link • Global Reported By Chip Saunders
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The Newspaper

Part Two of a two-part editorial by Richard Diamond detailing problems of fairness and accuracy that come with reliance upon photo enforcement.

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The Newspaper

Part One of a two-part editorial by Richard Diamond detailing problems of fairness and accuracy that come with reliance upon photo enforcement.

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The Newspaper

The $4 million registry maintains files on motorists across the country that contain names, dates of birth, sex, heights, weights, eye colors and the details of any tickets received. About one out of five drivers -- 42 million -- is listed in the dat

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Baltimore Sun/Matthew Dolan

Jury awards $2.9 million in compensatory damages to father of slain Marine. The father claimed that a Westboro Baptist protest at his son's funeral caused him emotional distress and invaded his privacy.

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mondoreb

As if Harry Potter needed any more publicity. J.K. Rowling threw some more logs on the Harry Potter publicity fire Friday. And all-inclusiveness took a homosexual turn, as gayness overtakes the Harry Potter series: who comes out of the closet?

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