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Thread: Couple Can Sue Laptop-Tracking Company (LoJack) for Spying on Sex Chats

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  1. #1
    G. Morgan Guest

    Re: Couple Can Sue Laptop-Tracking Company (LoJack) for Spying on Sex Chats

    VanguardLH wrote:

    >Didn't know it was stolen. Uh huh. A laptop for $60 and from a
    >student. If the substitute teacher tries that defense then she's
    >admitting she's too stupid to be a teacher after which the school's that
    >hired her should sue for her misrepresentation.


    Heh, no doubt.

    >And, of course, it's always such a smart idea to leave the OS and apps
    >and data files in place on any used computer rather than flatten and
    >rebuild.


    First thing I do on all brand-new machines with factory ****.

    > Hmm, wonder what her excuse will be if they happen to find
    >kiddie porn on the laptop.


    I think she can claim stupid in that case, why would a 52 y/o woman be
    into CP?

    Anyhow...

    The text I quoted was the back-story, the real issue is if LoJack and
    company are guilty of illegal wiretapping. Will be an interesting
    precedent. I'm not sure which side I'm on yet. The laptop belongs to
    the school and they gave LoJack permission to monitor everything and
    anything on it. But...

    Wiretapping laws are set at the State level. Some States it's totally
    illegal to record any communications, some allow it as long as one of
    the parties communicating is privy to the recording.

    Ohio's law says one party must know they are being recorded, and these
    two lovebirds didn't. In addition, Ohio has a little 'extra' for sexual
    communication: http://www.rcfp.org/taping/states/ohio.html

    ____________

    "But the judge found that there were grounds to believe Absolute had
    gone too far, and that a jury might reasonably decide that it had
    violated the plaintiffs’ privacy and broken the law. The case raises an
    important issue about the length that someone can legally go to recover
    stolen goods."

    “It is one thing to cause a stolen computer to report its IP address or
    its geographical location in an effort to track it down,” Rice wrote in
    his decision (.pdf). “It is something entirely different to violate
    federal wiretapping laws by intercepting the electronic communications
    of the person using the stolen laptop.”

  2. #2
    Dustin Guest

    Re: Couple Can Sue Laptop-Tracking Company (LoJack) for Spying on Sex Chats

    G. Morgan <G_Morgan@easy.com> wrote in
    news:4trs57ph8st2quvbpvp4dbpkpj6kvca9c3@Osama-is-dead.net:

    > VanguardLH wrote:
    >
    >>Didn't know it was stolen. Uh huh. A laptop for $60 and from a
    >>student. If the substitute teacher tries that defense then she's
    >>admitting she's too stupid to be a teacher after which the school's
    >>that hired her should sue for her misrepresentation.

    >
    > Heh, no doubt.
    >
    >>And, of course, it's always such a smart idea to leave the OS and
    >>apps and data files in place on any used computer rather than
    >>flatten and rebuild.

    >
    > First thing I do on all brand-new machines with factory ****.
    >
    >> Hmm, wonder what her excuse will be if they happen to find
    >>kiddie porn on the laptop.

    >
    > I think she can claim stupid in that case, why would a 52 y/o woman
    > be into CP?
    >
    > Anyhow...
    >
    > The text I quoted was the back-story, the real issue is if LoJack
    > and company are guilty of illegal wiretapping. Will be an
    > interesting precedent. I'm not sure which side I'm on yet. The
    > laptop belongs to the school and they gave LoJack permission to
    > monitor everything and anything on it. But...
    >
    > Wiretapping laws are set at the State level. Some States it's
    > totally illegal to record any communications, some allow it as long
    > as one of the parties communicating is privy to the recording.
    >
    > Ohio's law says one party must know they are being recorded, and
    > these two lovebirds didn't. In addition, Ohio has a little 'extra'
    > for sexual communication:
    > http://www.rcfp.org/taping/states/ohio.html
    >
    > ____________
    >
    > "But the judge found that there were grounds to believe Absolute had
    > gone too far, and that a jury might reasonably decide that it had
    > violated the plaintiffs’ privacy and broken the law. The case
    > raises an important issue about the length that someone can legally
    > go to recover stolen goods."
    >
    > “It is one thing to cause a stolen computer to report its IP
    > address or its geographical location in an effort to track it
    > down,” Rice wrote in his decision (.pdf). “It is something
    > entirely different to violate federal wiretapping laws by
    > intercepting the electronic communications of the person using the
    > stolen laptop.”
    >


    HEHEHE.. I'll be watching this case with a vested interest. I always
    suspected some of it's activities needed to be challenged in a
    courtroom, I *knew* they weren't right. If I pulled even a quarter of
    the information retrieval they do, I'd be sued for all sorts of
    violations. Wiretapping being but one of them. I wonder how much
    confidential data they've recovered due to the spying?


    --
    I am a sinner
    Hold my prayers upto the sun
    I am a sinner
    Heaven's closed for what I've done.

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