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Privacy Law Will Need to be Reformed in The Modern Age of Technological Media

Privacy Law Will Need to be Reformed in The Modern Age of Technological Media

Keeping secrets in the age of tweets is going to be somewhat of a challenge. Britain’s privacy law is a mess and increasingly unsustainable. Taking common law principles of fairness, add a dash of European human rights legislation, a lucrative tabloid trade in kiss and tells stories and ineffective press watchdog, touch or banks about service justice and the technology that makes everyone into a publisher and what do you get? The mess of Britain’s privacy laws. Now, under sweeping review by jointly both Houses of Parliament.

The latest and most spectacular episode involves a married footballer, Ryan Giggs at Manchester United who went to court to stop news organizations reporting on his alleged affair with a woman who the judge said they had been trying to blackmail him although she denies this. Mr Giggs gained the remedy sought but not the result of which is that his private life became a public scandal with his name featuring in fans Calls in state in use as a catchphrase on talk shows broadcast by 75,000 Twitter users and ultimately on May 23 mention in the House of …

Internet Law And Social Media in The UK

Internet Law And Social Media in The UK

The internet is often deemed to be like the Wild West. It is viewed as a lawless region where people can act outside the laws of the land. This is not the case. The jail sentences handed down to a number of individuals who tweeted or posted Facebook messages about the riots in England in August clearly illustrate that there laws governing what can be posted online carry real consequences. Breaking the law online is as serious as breaking the law offline.

The law that the social media users broke was the Serious Crime Act 2007. Although the law was not set up to cover the use of social media, the use of social media was much lower in 2007 than it is now, the law of the land applies online to the same degree that it does off line.

The Serious Crime Act 2007 states that either “intentionally encouraging or assisting an offence” or “encouraging or assisting an offence believing it will be committed” is viewed as being as serious as carrying out the act itself. So if you post a Facebook message encouraging people to riot and loot then it …