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It was a perfectly ordinary summer’s day. On July 29 last year, Angela Lay, a performance management officer at Maldon Council in Essex, got up early and drove the two-and- a- half miles from her home in Heybridge Basin half to go shopping in Maldon. She left Tesco at 6.03am, having spent £126.80 on food and earned 60 points on her reward card, returned home and unloaded the silver Renault Megane diesel car she had bought four years earlier. She then caught
Originally posted by soficrow
reply to post by EvanB
And making it illegal to be anonymous on the internet does NOT increase our safety - it just makes it legal for these corporate sobs to act on their knowledge.
Check this out: Goodbye internet privacy in canada
Good catch - S&F btw
Originally posted by Misterlondon
Great article... Good find S n F
Highlights exactly the information stored about us.. It's actually quite scary reading that..
This is exactly why I only use cash..
Originally posted by Misterlondon
Great article... Good find S n F
Highlights exactly the information stored about us.. It's actually quite scary reading that..
This is exactly why I only use cash..
Originally posted by ZIPMATT
Are we sure its not a post-looting psy-op?
That said,
I can fully beleive it . You will all i hope enjoy too a thread i am cooking up about the NHS, Mental Health Services ( esp Forensic Psychiatry), The Ministry of Justice , DH, PO Box 500 et al.
If you have violent tendencies or dont get on well with authority , your paranoia buttons are about to get pushed
Originally posted by ZIPMATT
reply to post by EvanB
Their mummys and daddys might read it though ! It was the 'pinging' issue to do with phone location which set off the hack-gate business. Police supplied the info to the likes of - news of the world ?
Originally posted by EvanB
Originally posted by ZIPMATT
reply to post by EvanB
Their mummys and daddys might read it though ! It was the 'pinging' issue to do with phone location which set off the hack-gate business. Police supplied the info to the likes of - news of the world ?
Yeah, and the police also sell info to accident ambulance chasing lawyers on those who have road traffic accidents and alike.
What other info they selling?
And why are we not stringing them up with the looters?
the fish pie, broccoli and bread-and-butter pudding she ate afterwards.
Under the Regulation Of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the police, HM Revenue & Customs, UK Border Agency, Security Services and other Government agencies can access any of these databases – public or private – without a warrant.
reply to post by EvanB
As can the police forces and examining magistrates of 32 European countries – without reference to any UK court.t
wiki MI5
Executive Liaison Groups enable MI5 to safely share secret, sensitive, and often raw intelligence with the police, on which decisions can be made about how best to gather evidence and prosecute suspects in the courts. Each organization works in partnership throughout the investigation, but MI5 retain the lead for collecting, assessing and exploiting intelligence. The police take lead responsibility for gathering evidence, obtaining arrests and preventing risks to the public
reply to post by Pervius
Today they can use the wifi connection on her laptop as radar and detect when she comes home, how many people are in her home...the dimensions of the room the laptop is in....