whotheheckami (
whotheheckami) wrote2003-07-24 09:22 pm
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Phone Privicy
I wonder if anyone can help
gardenpixie out? She needs to know if she has any come back against someone (the Fiddler) who taped a private telephone conversation without her knowledge some weeks ago.
She knows that he has played the tape to one other person, but does not know if he still has the tape.
Does anyone know if she can demand that he destroys the tape?
My knowledge is only about using tapes of conversations as evidence in Police matters and in thisa case I can't advise her.
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She knows that he has played the tape to one other person, but does not know if he still has the tape.
Does anyone know if she can demand that he destroys the tape?
My knowledge is only about using tapes of conversations as evidence in Police matters and in thisa case I can't advise her.
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In theory she has copyright in her oral speech as much as what she writes (so long as it has some kind of "literary" merit - which really just means in this context that it was more than a few words long and made some kind of sense) - so yes, she then controls "public performances" of the tape.
In reality though enforcing this is completely impossible, but you did ask.
The physical tape itself is his property - but she can demand that he not play it to anyone without her consent.
He has also possibly committed a criminal offence of some kind - I'm less sure on that - but the civil law is really what you want for the remedy required.
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My concern is that he seems to be taping quite a few of his calls. I have no idea why or if he keeps the tapes.
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If you want to scare him with threats of calling in police I could look and see if this is , as I suspect, some kind of criminal act of unauthorised interception or the like?
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Whatever the circumstances, conversations taped without the prior knowledge and consent of the Other Party are completely inadmissable in court or elsewhere. Anything else is hearsay, and he's technically breaking the law by playing it to other people.
[intermission]
Disloyal prick. Would you like me to pay him A Visit?
[/intermission]
Beyond this, I'm at a loss. I have had one vindictive ex, but luckily he stopped short of anything beyond the pale on this level.
Hug Pixie for me, please.
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I'd love to tell you more of the gory details, but I must be careful about what I put into an open forum.
Thanks babe.
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anyone I can kick the crap out ofanything I can do.no subject
BUT
As far as I understand it you have to give permission to have your actions/words broadcast and if it is being played it is being broadcast and so he is breaking the law.
And its a shitty thing to do. I have a close personal friend who had their computer hacked and private chat logs broadcast in a vindictive act. I can't think of anything more disgusting than personal thoughts or conversations being publicly broadcast.
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Me thinks the Fiddler has fiddled too much arouind here.
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Fluffy.
Like a bunny.
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(Well, no, more like Bigwig.)
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But i may be wrong.
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Gosh the law involved in this is complex isn;t it? DP, copyright, criminal and evidence - I should do an article on it.
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If you didn't want to be bound by that, you would stick to old fashioned tapes. Which do a far better job of standing up in court too.
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For example, the trading desks of banks and presumeably police stations don't need to make such announcements.
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Where it gets muddy is whether playing the recording to other people constitutes fair-use. I would say that if it can be proved that the intention or use was actually malicious, then he's in trouble.
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Mel
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It's what use they're put to that counts, legally.
And if you want to go the whole Strangers on a Train thing, I'll cheerfully mash some fingers in Rutland for you if you'll break a few legs in Yorkshire for me.
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http://www.oftel.gov.uk/consumer/advice/faqs/prvfaq3.htm
It's OK to record residential calls as long as they aren't made available to a 3rd party.......
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