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Go to: spiked-centralspiked-liberties Issues: Privacy

Privacy

Article22 July 2005
Do mobile phones invade our privacy?
A report on the live spiked-debate.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Tuesday 23 May 2006, London
Save the planet, don't see
the world?
Tourism versus the environment
Article18 July 2005
Mobile politics
Do mobile phones invade our privacy? British MPs give their views.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Article29 April 2005
We should keep our noses out of the Beckhams' bedroom
spiked editor Mick Hume's Notebook in The Times (London) on national voyeurism.

by Mick Humeinspiked-liberties

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2 March 2006
Child obesity
Should we worry if our children are overweight?
Other articles
Article1 October 2004
Princess of privacy
Caroline of Monaco went shopping for censorship at the European Court, and found just what she was looking for.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article17 March 2004
Who is Big Brother?
Current debates about privacy overvalue data protection and neglect genuine privacy.

by Jason Burtoninspiked-IT

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Article17 March 2004
Monitoring the office
Social network analysis could be used for something more useful than spying on employees.

by Paul Reevesinspiked-IT

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Article14 January 2004
The Naked Crowd
A new book by US legal theorist Jeffrey Rosen explains how risk-aversion threatens our freedom, technology, and security.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Politics of Fear by Frank Furedi
Read the interview on spiked
Buy the book from Amazon(UK)
Article5 August 2003
Who needs a privacy law?
A government committee proposes regulating the media regulators - and still claims to believe in a free press.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article11 June 2003
Fertility treatment: abolish the 'welfare principle'
People seeking fertility treatment in the UK should have the freedom to decide to conceive.

by Emily Jacksoninspiked-liberties

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Article17 April 2003
Courting celebrities
The Zeta Jones privacy case ends in confusion - and yet another restriction on free speech.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article26 March 2003
Trusting technology
Regulating IT to make it more ‘trusted’ confuses computers with people.

by Norman Lewisinspiked-IT

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Article31 October 2002
Ulrikitis
The Ulrika Jonsson story represents a new low in confessional journalism.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article22 October 2002
Restraint or revelation?
Free speech and privacy in a confessional age. A spiked-report.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article18 October 2002
'Stalked' by the news
From supermodels to union leaders, crying ‘harassment’ has become a way of censoring the press.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article8 October 2002
Privacy: open up the debate
Critics of state snooping should stop appealing to human rights law.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Article12 August 2002
Courting censorship
Cherie Blair's law firm should keep its demands for a privacy code to itself.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article23 July 2002
Human rights RIP
How human rights legislation has strengthened the UK government's surveillance powers.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-liberties

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Article9 July 2002
Caught in the .NET
Does Microsoft's Passport system invade our privacy?

by Jason Burtoninspiked-IT

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Article4 July 2002
Playing the ID card
Identity cards for all will reinforce a climate of suspicion.

by Josie Appletoninspiked-liberties

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Article4 July 2002
RIPping into our rights
With its Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, Britain is fast becoming a test site for new forms of surveillance.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-liberties

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Article10 May 2002
Press freedom: it's not trivial
Journalists should stand up for free speech - while questioning the media’s obsession with people's personal lives.

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article10 May 2002
Private lives, public obsession
Just because something interests the public doesn't mean it is in the public interest to publish it.

by Barbara Hewsoninspiked-liberties

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Article7 February 2002
Moving on
For the mobile internet to succeed, innovators need to stop worrying about consumer concerns.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Article19 October 2001
Online insecurity
The restrictions on privacy rights in the USA after 11 September have captured a diminished sense of freedom.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Article5 October 2001
A princely approach to privacy
How did the UK media end up doing a better job of defending the royal family's privacy than the royal family itself?

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article21 August 2001
Privacy online: what's the problem?
Why do those concerned about online privacy see state regulation as the solution?

by Norman Lewisinspiked-IT

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Article9 August 2001
Not in front of the children?
Standards of free speech on the internet should surely be set by adults.

by Sandy Starrinspiked-IT

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Article18 July 2001
spiked-seminars: Privacy from whom?
spiked has been organising a series of seminars in the run-up to its London conference, Don't Blow IT. Norman Lewis and Neil Barrett led the discussion on privacy and data protection.

by Norman Lewis and Neil Barrettinspiked-IT

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Article4 July 2001
Storm over Hailstorm
Microsoft's 'Hailstorm' web service could make the internet cleverer - and your life more convenient. So why has it proved so controversial?

by Jason Burtoninspiked-IT

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Article27 June 2001
No privacy in public?
If it intrudes on somebody's privacy for the media to broadcast CCTV coverage, why does the media get the blame - and not Britain's 24-hour surveillance society?

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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Article26 February 2001
Net anonymity: free speech or cheap words?
If you have something to say, then sign it.

by Dave Amisinspiked-IT

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Article16 February 2001
Whose data is it anyway?
How new measures to combat benefit fraud will cheat us of our privacy.

by Andrew Coxinspiked-politics

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Article7 February 2001
Camera shy
How much should the press respect celebrities' privacy?

by Tessa Mayesinspiked-liberties

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