ChatterBank14 mins ago
Phone Hacking: In Public Interest?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8142047.stm
Do we as "Joe Public" have a right to know what politicians + "celebs" are twittering on about? Do "the authorities" need to know? Is it a breach of personal privacy?
Is it necessary in any way, shape or form?
Do we as "Joe Public" have a right to know what politicians + "celebs" are twittering on about? Do "the authorities" need to know? Is it a breach of personal privacy?
Is it necessary in any way, shape or form?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Phone and internet companies have to keep a record and digital versions of every phone call and email, and websites visited by everyone in the country. This is a matter of law and was introduced as a counter terrorism measure.
It is not in the public interest for newspapers and their criminal friends to break the law and listen to anyone they like. The motive is not public interest it is greed, financial gain and the desire to sell more newspapers.
Fortunately, the sordid dealings at the News of the World have not tainted the reputation or job prospects of the editor at the time. The News of the World's former editor, Andy Coulson, now works as director of communications for the Conservative party
It is not in the public interest for newspapers and their criminal friends to break the law and listen to anyone they like. The motive is not public interest it is greed, financial gain and the desire to sell more newspapers.
Fortunately, the sordid dealings at the News of the World have not tainted the reputation or job prospects of the editor at the time. The News of the World's former editor, Andy Coulson, now works as director of communications for the Conservative party
It also raises the interesting question of fines or damages for wrongdoing such as this by newspapers. There are those that argue that giant fines or damages are out of proportion compared to compensation or fines for other things. But if you don't hurt these organisations where it really gets them, in the balance sheet, then it is so cheap they need not bother and can do anything!
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Socket this site is a database! it just has a web front end.
Almost everything on the net is on databases and they are backed up. Most everything is kept by someone. It's the way the net works - get used to it!
Try http://www.archive.org you can find what was on a given web page at a particular time.
Almost everything on the net is on databases and they are backed up. Most everything is kept by someone. It's the way the net works - get used to it!
Try http://www.archive.org you can find what was on a given web page at a particular time.
I wasn't sure it was in the public interest at the time as the data were due to be published anyway. It wasn't until I saw how heavily they'd been 'redacted' that I finally changed my mind and started cheering the Telegraph. But the Telegraph couldn't have known about the degree of redaction at the time either, so they bought the stolen data for the same reason the NoW has done: to sell newspapers and make money.
well, I dunno, gromit, the actual criminality exposed was pretty slight - a couple of people claiming on mortgages they didn't have? (Apologies if I've forgotten other examples.) The rest included some ethical spivvishness, much sitcom hilarity about duck islands, and a fair amount of non-newsy stuff about grocery bills that were perfectly in order.
I'd have had no problems with the Telegraph printing just the criminal stuff. But printing everyone's expenses when they were due to be published anyway looks to me like the Telegraph just wanted a scoop - they paid so they could get in first. If Parliament's own publication of the expenses had been equally transparent, the Telegraph would have had great difficulty saying they'd done anything very much in the public interest. Fortunately for them, MPs' own mania for secrecy retrospectively justified the newspaper, which is when I agreed it had done the right thing after all. But I don't believe it was clear-cut at the time.
I'd have had no problems with the Telegraph printing just the criminal stuff. But printing everyone's expenses when they were due to be published anyway looks to me like the Telegraph just wanted a scoop - they paid so they could get in first. If Parliament's own publication of the expenses had been equally transparent, the Telegraph would have had great difficulty saying they'd done anything very much in the public interest. Fortunately for them, MPs' own mania for secrecy retrospectively justified the newspaper, which is when I agreed it had done the right thing after all. But I don't believe it was clear-cut at the time.