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Summary Of: Privacy

For the application of privacy within the Wikipedia community... Privacy is sometimes related to... Privacy can be seen as an aspect of... In some countries individual privacy may conflict with... Privacy may be voluntarily sacrificed... a wide variety of expectations about how much privacy a person is entitled to or what constitutes an... Physical privacy could be defined as preventing... the legal basis for the right to physical privacy would be the US... Physical privacy may be a matter of cultural sensitivity... Data privacy refers to the evolving relationship between technology and the legal right to... or public expectation of privacy in the collection and sharing of data about ones self... Privacy concerns exist wherever uniquely identifiable data relating to a person or persons are collected and... this type of privacy very often does... the way in which privacy is protected and violated has changed with it... information can lead to new ways in which privacy can be breached... is generally agreed that the first publication advocating privacy in the United States was the article by... Also the consequences of a violation of privacy can be more severe... s rights to privacy as they see fit... But the existing global privacy rights framework has also been criticized as incoherent and inefficient... Privacy Framework have emerged which set out to provide the first comprehensive legal framework on the... Privacy uses the theory of natural rights... Privacy can be understood as an individual right... Privacy is also described as a collective value and a human right... and that privacy rights may limit government surveillance to protect democratic processes... process in which he balances the desire for privacy with the desire for disclosure and communication of himself to others... privacy creates a space separate from political life... Flaherty forwards an idea of privacy as information control... Posner criticizes privacy for concealing information... privacy breaches online can be regulated through code and law... the protection of privacy would be stronger if people conceived of the right as a property right... Economic approaches to privacy makes communal conceptions of privacy difficult to maintain... There have been attempts to reframe privacy as a fundamental... Additional ways of thinking about privacy have been explored by researchers largely outside of the field of law using various approaches... that work towards a concept of privacy beyond individual liberalism... He claims that privacy laws only increase government surveillance... Priscilla Regan believes that individual concepts of privacy have failed philosophically and in policy... She supports a social value of privacy with three dimensions... Shared ideas about privacy allows freedom of conscience and diversity in thought... Collective elements describe privacy as collective good that cannot be divided... s goal is to strengthen privacy claims in policy making... those advocating privacy protections would have a stronger basis upon which to argue for its protection... Regan Shade argues that the human right to privacy is necessary for meaningful democratic participation... Privacy depends on norms for how information is distributed... Violations of privacy depend on context... The human right to privacy has precedent in the... Shade believes that privacy must be approached from a people... Privacy law is the area of law concerning the protecting and preserving of privacy rights of... While there is no universally accepted privacy law among all countries... They prepare yearly rankings of privacy protection by country... as well as campaign for privacy in various nations orldwide... Privacy laws of the United States... privacy laws of the United States... privacy is not guaranteed per se by the... that implicitly grant a right to privacy against government intrusion... Privacy is regulated in the U... Privacy Act of 1974... Privacy Act of 1974... Mostly this legislation concerns privacy infringement by government organizations... exists to account for more specific cases personal privacy protection against commercial organizations... a governmental body which must authorize legislation concerning privacy before them being enacted... if the privacy of an individual is breached the individual may bring a lawsuit asking for monetary damages... action may be brought under another tort and privacy must then be considered under EC law... Privacy Law in the United States... Protecting privacy in surveillance societies... Privacy and the Limits of the Law...

Encyclodia Page On: Privacy

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Wikipedia:Privacy policy | anonymity | security | invasion of privacy | government | corporations | individuals | constitutions | taxation | earnings | freedom of speech | advertising | identity theft | invasion of privacy | modesty | dressed | walls | fences | cathedral glass | urinals | bed sheet | blanket | towel | Fourth Amendment | trespassing | stalking | Information privacy | discrimination | Financial privacy | fraud | identity theft | Internet privacy | email | personally identifiable information | Medical privacy | Political privacy | voting systems | secret ballot | democracy | citizenship | security | executive privilege | classified | trade secrets | printing press | Internet | Samuel Warren | Louis Brandeis | Kyllo v. United States | thermal imaging | information systems | information privacy | Privacy law | APEC | | talk page | requests for expansion | human right | Amitai Etzioni | communitarian | collective | United Nations Declaration of Human Rights | Privacy law | Universal Declaration of Human Rights | Privacy International | privacy laws of the United States | Constitution of the United States | Supreme Court of the United States | Griswold v. Connecticut | 1965 | Privacy Act of 1974 | Canadian privacy law | Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms | Privacy Act (Canada) | Data privacy | Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act | European Union | Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of personal data | United Kingdom | Data Protection Act 1998 | data protection | CNIL | Australia | Privacy Act 1988 | David Beckham | public interest | freedom of speech | First Amendment | Private sphere | Civil liberties | Consumer privacy | Personality rights | Surveillance | Workplace privacy | PATRIOT Act | Nineteen Eighty-Four | Digital identity | Berkeley Electronic Press | 2008 | 08-17 | BBC News | 27 April | 2005 | Ruth Gavison | | | | | | | | Electronic Privacy Information Center | Privacy International | Open Directory Project | Directorate-General for Justice, Freedom and Security | v | d | Universal Declaration of Human Rights | Freedom | Egalitarianism | Dignity | Brotherhood | Universality of rights | International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights | freedom from discrimination | Right to life | liberty | security of person | slavery | torture | cruel and unusual punishment | personhood | Equality before the law | remedy from the law | arbitrary arrest, detention | exile | Right to a fair trial | Presumption of innocence | retrospective law | Freedom of movement | Right of asylum | nationality | marriage | family | property | Freedom of thought | conscience | religion | Freedom of opinion and expression | Freedom of assembly | Freedom of association | participation | public office | universal suffrage | International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights | freedom from discrimination | social security | Right to work | equal pay for equal work | remuneration | trade union | leisure | standard of living | mothers | children | Right to education | Human rights education | Right to choice of education | culture | intellectual property | Social order | Social 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| UN Migrant Workers' Convention | International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid | International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance | International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights | International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights | African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights | American Convention on Human Rights | European Convention on Human Rights | European Convention for the Prevention of Torture | European Social Charter | Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture | Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide | Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees | Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees | Geneva Conventions | Hague Conventions | Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court | Freedom from discrimination | Right to life | Right to die | Security of person | Liberty | Freedom of movement | Freedom from slavery | Personhood | Right to bear arms | Equality before the law | Adequate remedy | Freedom from arbitrary arrest and detention | Freedom from torture | Freedom from cruel and unusual punishment | Right to a fair trial | Presumption of innocence | Right of asylum | Nationality | Freedom from exile | Freedom of thought and conscience | Freedom of religion | Freedom of expression | Freedom of assembly | Freedom of association | Right to protest | Universal suffrage | Marriage | Family life | Labor rights | Fair remuneration | Equal pay for equal work | Trade union membership | Right to social security | Leisure and rest | Right to work | Right to property | and intellectual | Right to culture | Right to public participation | Right to education | Right to adequate standard of living | Right to development | Right to health | Right to healthcare | Right to water | Right to food | Reproductive
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Privacy".