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20 votes
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We read 150 privacy policies. They were an incomprehensible disaster.
17 votes -
Acosta resigns as labor secretary over Epstein plea deal
15 votes -
Denmark fines Total for discharging chemicals into North Sea
6 votes -
Google faces contempt charge for failing to remove defamatory reviews
10 votes -
Novelists have condemned the Staunch prize – for thrillers without violence against women – as a ‘gagging order’, after organisers said the genre could bias jurors
7 votes -
Jeffrey Epstein arrested for sex trafficking of minors, will appear in New York court on Monday
20 votes -
Felix Ngole wins appeal in victory for Christian freedoms
Felix Ngole wins appeal in victory for Christian freedoms Here is the actual judgement by the Court of Appeal: PDF link This is a key paragraph (Section 5, Paragraph 10, on page 3 in the...
Felix Ngole wins appeal in victory for Christian freedoms
Here is the actual judgement by the Court of Appeal: PDF link
This is a key paragraph (Section 5, Paragraph 10, on page 3 in the document):
The University wrongly confused the expression of religious views with the notion of discrimination. The mere expression of views on theological grounds (e.g. that ‘homosexuality is a sin’) does not necessarily connote that the person expressing such views will discriminate on such grounds. In the present case, there was positive evidence to suggest that the Appellant had never discriminated on such grounds in the past and was not likely to do so in the future (because, as he explained, the Bible prohibited him from discriminating against anybody).
8 votes -
Alabama woman loses unborn child after being shot, gets arrested; shooter goes free
17 votes -
US Supreme Court punts on one of the most important tribal land cases ever
7 votes -
Indonesian police officer claims he was fired for being gay, files lawsuit for wrongful dismissal
4 votes -
Secrets and lies at Guantanamo Bay: Listening devices, FBI informants, and gag orders… these are just some of the ways that the US is mishandling classified information in the Al Qaeda trials
5 votes -
You can sue media companies over Facebook comments from readers, Australian court rules
13 votes -
For the first time since Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down in July 2014, prosecutors have announced charges against suspects in the case.
7 votes -
Twitch is suing the trolls who flooded Artifact streams with porn and gore
13 votes -
Man who shared mosque shooting livestream sentenced to twenty-one months in prison
20 votes -
Alex Jones sent Sandy Hook victims files with child sex abuse images, say lawyers
18 votes -
In court, Facebook blames users for destroying their own right to privacy
19 votes -
The state of California is investigating Riot Games for gender discrimination
12 votes -
Man accused of Christchurch mosque shootings pleads not guilty to fifty-one murder charges
9 votes -
Michigan authorities drop all criminal charges relating to Flint Water Crisis
6 votes -
San Francisco says it will use AI to reduce bias when charging people with crimes
11 votes -
Chelsea Manning against the grand jury
8 votes -
Hong Kong delays debate on extradition bill as thousands of protesters block key roads
8 votes -
Botswana decriminalises homosexuality in landmark ruling
11 votes -
InfoWars agrees to pay Pepe the Frog creator $15,000 in copyright settlement
25 votes -
Israel Folau to take Rugby Australia to Fair Work Commission over contract termination
4 votes -
Accused Darwin shooter tells court he is 'very sorry about what's happened'
6 votes -
Hong Kong’s top court sides with gay civil servant in application for spousal benefit and tax assessment
8 votes -
Indefinite solitary confinement in New York is finally put to the test
12 votes -
US judge tosses all charges in white nationalist rioting plot
15 votes -
George Pell's appeal to be broadcast live on Supreme Court website
3 votes -
Lawyers for Noah’s Ark theme park are suing its insurance company for rain damage
6 votes -
Boris Johnson has been ordered to appear in court over claims he lied by saying the UK gave the EU £350m a week
11 votes -
How eminent domain is blighting farmers in path of gas pipeline
5 votes -
Facebook's Zuckerberg and Sandberg will disregard subpoenas to appear in front of Canada-hosted International Grand Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy
13 votes -
'This case will set a precedent': First major opioid trial to begin in Oklahoma
4 votes -
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange charged in eighteen-count superseding indictment
19 votes -
On exercising your rights in privacy policies
@swipp_it: 1/ So, I guess my new "hobby" over the past few years has become reading terms of service/privacy policies for things I want to use and then trying to enforce my rights as laid out in those policies. Unsurprisingly, companies are often not certain how to respond to this.
11 votes -
Jussie Smollett’s case file is unsealed by judge
8 votes -
Tfue’s fight against Faze Clan is new for e-sports, not YouTube
5 votes -
Jeremy was fired for refusing fingerprinting at work. His case led to an 'extraordinary' unfair dismissal ruling.
13 votes -
Julian Assange: Swedish prosecutor requests detention of WikiLeaks founder
7 votes -
Accused mosque shooter now facing terrorism charge
4 votes -
House Intelligence Committee releases transcripts of Michael Cohen's closed-door testimony
12 votes -
Alex Jones’s Pepe the Frog copyright trial will help decide who can use memes
18 votes -
Adobe warns customers of potential legal action for using older versions of Creative Cloud apps
19 votes -
Judge rejects Musk’s arguments to dismiss “pedo guy” defamation suit
14 votes -
Once defiant, all four white supremacists charged in Charlottesville violence plead guilty
13 votes -
Justine Damond Ruszczyk's family wins record $US20 million payment over wrongful death
6 votes