|
This is Your IP Address, Browser Settings, Screen Resolution, as the World Sees It.
* Use a Web Proxy to Protect Your Privacy!
Your IP: 38.103.63.60
* Here is a list of Proxy Sites that protect your internet privacy by protecting your IP address. Using a proxy also protect you from hackers knowing your real home IP address. If they know your real ip address they can then target your computer directly.
voidAGE.info
FreeFinal.com
FreeFinal.info
Below is quoted from Wikipedia - by performing a search for "privacy"
"Privacy is the ability of an individual or group to seclude
themselves or information about themselves and thereby reveal
themselves selectively. The boundaries and content of what is
considered private differs between cultures and individuals, but share
basic common themes. Privacy is sometimes related to anonymity, the wish to remain unnoticed or unidentified in the public realm. When something is private to a person,
it usually means there is something within them that is considered
inherently special or personally sensitive. The degree to which private
information is exposed therefore depends on how the public will receive
this information, which differs between places and over time. Privacy
can be seen as an aspect of security — one in which trade-offs between the interests of one group and another can become particularly clear.
The right against unsanctioned invasion of privacy by the government, corporations or individuals is part of many countries' privacy laws, and in some cases, constitutions. Almost all countries have laws which in some way limit privacy; an example of this would be law concerning taxation, which normally require the sharing of information about personal income or earnings. In some countries individual privacy may conflict with freedom of speech
laws and some laws may require public disclosure of information which
would be considered private in other countries and cultures.
Privacy may be voluntarily sacrificed, normally in exchange for
perceived benefits and very often with specific dangers and losses,
although this is a very strategic view of human relationships.
Academics who are economists, evolutionary theorists, and research
psychologists describe revealing privacy as a 'voluntary sacrifice',
where sweepstakes or competitions are involved. In the business world,
a person may give personal details (often for advertising
purposes) in order to enter a gamble of winning a prize. Information
which is voluntarily shared and is later stolen or misused can lead to identity theft."
And then again at Wikipedia - A Search for "Civil Liberties"
"Privacy laws
-
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in article 12, states:
- No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his
privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honor
and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law
against such interference or attacks.
Privacy is not guaranteed per se by the Constitution of the United States. The Supreme Court of the United States
has found that other guarantees have "penumbras" that implicitly grant
a right to privacy against government intrusion, for example in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965). Privacy is regulated in the U.S. by the Privacy Act of 1974, and various state laws.
The European Union requires all member states to legislate to ensure that citizens have a right to privacy, through directives such as the 1995 Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of personal data. It is regulated in the United Kingdom by the Data Protection Act 1998 and in France data protection is also monitored by the CNIL, a governmental body which must authorize legislation concerning privacy before them being enacted. In Australia there is the Privacy Act 1988.
If the privacy of an individual is breached, the individual may
bring a lawsuit asking for monetary damages. However, in the United
Kingdom, some recent cases involving celebrities such as David Beckham, have resulted in defeat as the information has been determined in the courts to be in the public interest.[14] In the United States, the right of freedom of speech granted in the First Amendment have limited the effects of lawsuits for breach of privacy.
Organisations such as Privacy International, a London-based non-governmental organization formed in 1990,
exist as a watchdog on surveillance and privacy invasions by
governments and corporations. On the flip side organizations such as
ARTICLE 19 a UK based non-governmental organization exist as a watchdog
on governments using privacy as a tool for censorship and restrictions
on free speech.
In the United States, Federal law regulating communications carriers prohibits the disclosure of customer phone records.[15]
Breaches of this law in the private sector were found to be common,
with sales of call detail information becoming the subject of
Congressional inquiry. More recently, it has been revealed that the
United States National Security Agency has been warehousing the call
detail information of billions of individual phone calls for pattern
analysis. Whether this was done in violation of law or through powers
granted by Congress as part of the broader "War on Terrorism" is the
subject of debate."
|