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Andy_1984

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Posts posted by Andy_1984

  1. 'They' can access all my 'phone calls, txt messages, whatsapp communications and etc as much as 'they' wish, got no problem with it at all, nothing to hide nor be ashamed of.

    You were in the police force were you not ?

     

    I reffer you to the 9,000 cases of blatant abuse by our trusted authorities between 2014 and 2016 if i remember correctly, a lot of which commited by the police.

     

    Heres a few

    The trial heard that Mr Gilbert had been involved in a dispute over a parking space at Asda with Zoe Forbes, 26, four days before his death. The court heard how Mark Forbes then plotted a revenge attack and traced Mr Gilberts address through a then-serving police officer.

    ____

     

    A ruthless rapist found victims by getting a job as a care worker and trawling a councils database for

     

    vulnerable young girls. Simeon Kellman, 43, used computer records to identify teenagers who had just come out of

     

    the foster care system.

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    The Telegraph reports that young women fleeing forced marriages are being betrayed by GPs and benefits staff

     

    who collude with families to return them against their will, a senior police officer police has revealed.

     

    Doctors and Job Centre workers are breaching confidentiality rules and passing on vital information to families,

     

    allowing them to trace and punish Asian women who are attempting to escape coerced marriages and honour-based

     

    domestic violence.

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    The Daily Telegraph reports that a battered wifes confidential address details were twice passed to her ex-

     

    husband by his girlfriend while she was working in a Government tax office. Mother-of-two Donna-Lee Camacho, 28,

     

    lived in fear while her former spouse who cannot be named for legal reasons tracked her down.

    _______

     

    Home Office releases figures on numbers of staff disciplined and dismissed for misconduct relating to personal

     

    data. Kable reports that the Identity and Passport Service has dismissed 14 people over the last three years,

     

    most for abusing access to the passport database. Of 16 cases where data protection was breached, all but one

     

    involved members of staff who had legitimate access to the Passport Application Support System database, and who

     

    used this for unauthorised checks not related to their duties. The other case involved a contractor misusing

     

    data to which he had legitimate access. The IPS is to look after the National Identity Register.

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    The Herald reports that Seven prominent BBC journalists are among a group of patients who have been warned that

     

    their personal health records may have been inappropriately accessed by a doctor. Yesterday, patients caught

     

    in the mysterious drama told The Herald they were deeply concerned by what might have motivated such behaviour.

     

    One woman from Glasgow said: Its bad enough discovering that my private medical records have been accessed in

     

    this way but whats really disconcerting is not knowing what this guy was up to. How come someone in Fife can

     

    see NHS records for anyone in Scotland? Ive got absolutely no connection at all with Fife.

    ______________________

     

    Just shy of 1,000 civil servants working at the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), were disciplined for

     

    accessing personal social security records. The Department for Health (DoH), which operates the U.K.'s National

     

    Health Service and more importantly all U.K. medical records, saw more than 150 breaches occur over a 13-month

     

    period.

     

     

    Between April 2010 and March 2011, 513 civil servants were found to have made "unauthorised disclosures of

     

    official, sensitive, private and/or personal information. The year continuing, between April 2011 and January

     

    2012, more than 460 staff were disciplined.

     

     

    The DoH on the other hand said it did not log each and every breach of unlawful access to U.K. medical records.

     

    It did say there were 158 recorded breaches in 2011.

     

     

    Cleveland Police -

    A special constable was dismissed for passing confidential information in relation to a detainee to a relative.

     

    Metropolitan Police -

    An officer found the name of a victim amusing and attempted to take a photo of his driving licence to send to his friend via snapchat

     

    The officer resigned during disciplinary action.

     

    Essex Police -

    An officer has been suspended and is under investigation for abusing his position to form relationships with a number of females. It is suspected that he carried out police checks without a policing purpose.

     

    Greater Manchester Police-

    An officer informed an individual they were to be arrested. In response management action was taken.

     

    Merseyside Police -

    An officer inappropriately shared information. Allegation that officer has breached force confidentiality by attending a fellow officers house and informing him that a sex offender lived in his road. As a result of his actions the information was passed to a thirdparty outside the organisation

     

    North Yorkshire Police -

    Unidentified officer left paper file containing sensitive data in raided property. No action was taken as the officer could not be identified.

    South Yorkshire Police -

    It is alleged that whilst off duty, an officer has used mobile device to conduct a check on a vehicle. In response advice was given to the officer in question

    South Wales Police -

    An officer was dismissed without notice for photographing and disseminating restricted documentation for personal gain.

     

    Dyfed Powys Police -

    An officer passed a USB device to a member of the public. It contained sensitive police information, including intelligence reports, emails and public information letters relating to crime. In response informal action was taken by the force

     

     

     

    Demonising people with the stupid "nothing to hide nothing to fear" strap line is bang out of order. Everyone has something to hide but that does not mean that thing is illegal. That copper tracking down an ex for example had feckin plenty to hide but hey ho nothing to fear right ? People like you are part of the problem. If youbthink really really hard i guarantee you have something to hide whichbis perfectly legal but you just dont want someone knowing. Your deluded if you think it could never possibly be abused. Its proven that it HAS been abused.

     

    The scary thing is all the abuses above were on a limited set of data but now they want MORE data and with MORE gov agencies ablento access that amd all by the oversight of a damn politician. They cant even be trusted with the data they hold now ffs!

  2. I think they are still trying the porn one steve. Using the board of film something or other.

     

    Its mental they want to ban "obscene" content such as bondage. All this based on what somone thinks is obscene never mind that its not illegal to tie up and spank a willing participant. More than 4 fingers being inserted is seen as obscene. All we will have is boring softcore missionary positions.

  3. And it doesn't stop there it seems, Labour MP, Naz Shah, 'accidentally' retweeted "Those abused girls in Rotherham and elsewhere just need to shut their mouths. For the good of diversity." Jeremy Corbyn immediately does...nothing.

     

    Perhaps I might believe Ms Shah's accident excuse if she didn't have a history of offensive postings including comparing Jews to Hitler and demanding that all Jews in Israel be deported to America.

     

    Several days go by and Jeremy has decided to do sweet F all about those comments which are obviously 'acceptable' or so it seems.

    Im not defending her but the tweet was shared from some sort of parody account. You can take it anyway you like. The way you said it it sounds like she agrees they should keep their mouth shuts. Im pretty sure there was some sort of irony in there not that she agreed with the comment ?

  4. I have one. Great bit of kit but no longer available on Amazon - which is where I got mine.

    Mines was from a small tackle shop when they first came out. They had the exceed logo on them as a gel/rubber type sticker.

     

    I lost one and broke the other (very thin tipped one and in my pocket it snapped, seen it coming)

     

    Got my replacment from glasgow angling centre (just around the corner) obviously the cheeper version no gel sticker logo thingy and plastic/lines from the mould proccess visible but still an excellent disgorger imo

  5. It is good for wildlife, those bell ends on spring watch don't know their arses from their elbows!

    I even give wholemeal bread to my macaws and i'm handrearing six chicks now and a pair is back down on three eggs and the other pair are treading and digging out again....tey arn't the easiest of birds to breed either. I give them the bread from February to condition them.

    Birds ( a lot of birds that is) eat grains and bread is made from...................... grains :).

    I used to keep hedgehogs as a kid and I even bred those a good few times. As well as minced beef, eggs (no cat food either as the so called experts say is best for them) etc I gave them bread and milk which is supposed to kill them....yeah course it does LOL. I've no idea why these nature program people come up with this nonsense.

    They'll be saying grass is bad for cows next!

     

    Oh, forgot to say, raw meat is no good for dogs either, it's gott'a be cooked don't you know.

     

    sounds like you know more than me on feeding habbits of birds but when you think of how many people daily feeding swans and ducks for example with nowt but white bread day in day out in large quantities something tells me that is not good for them.

  6. I as in Stratford-upon-Avon yesterday, and while my wife and daughter went shopping, I tried to find a quiet(ish) spot down by the river, (no chance). While I sat and watched the river, rowers, swans, ducks, and geese, etc, two young ladies came down to the waters edge. They looked of oriental decent, and looked very much like models, both in physical appearance, and dress. As pleasing as they were to the eye, I soon had to move. They had a large plastic carrier bag with them, which they opened to reveal 5 large unopened loaves of bread. They then started to throw it onto the water. First came a few ducks, then a couple of swans, and within 5 minutes, the area was a heaving mass of water fowl, with dozens of pigeons joining in on land. Despite my advice that it wasn't good for the birds, they just smiled and gave a look of 'silly old sod', and carried on. By now there were a few dozen onlookers, and the air was filled with at least a half dozen different languages, all seemingly excited by this spectacle. Then they all started vying for the best photo opportunity, while others arrived with even more bread to add to the feast.

     

    If loose feeding is littering, the this was more like mass pollution!

     

    John.

    That bugs the crap out of me that people think bread is good for wildlife.

  7. Just noticed this as I was about to log off....

     

    215 users are online (in the past 60 minutes)

    8 members, 205 guests, 2 anonymous users

     

    ....so there's still plenty of people online, just lurking.

    Unlikely to be members though. Visitors from google search finding old info.

  8. Second snap for me mister :clap3: :clap3:

     

    4th one i wish was perfectly in focus, took me forever to get one in shot with the flag. that was before i discovered AI Servo (continuos auto focus at half press on button till button pressed all the way)

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