Results for the tag, serious crime.

Find the latest news and information on serious crime from ComputerWeekly.com and the web.

All ResultsResults from Computer Weekly - SERIOUS CRIME

...The Home Office wants to hold the communications data because police say they need it to tackle terrorism and other serious crime. It attempted to push through a government-controlled communications database which would have held data on phone... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/11/16/239039/isps-criticise-government-plans-to-store-all-comms-data.htm
...unfortunate love lorn professor and a student recently found out (not for the amorous nature of the content but for the serious crime of plagiarism evident in them). The long and short is that for future historians email will no longer reveal gems... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/IT-collaboration-technology-blog/2008/01/the-moving-finger-writes-but-s.html
...Revenue & Customs and other government departments "only where it is necessary for the prevention or detection of serious crime". The NIR will not hold a vast amount of "new kinds of data", but the document does not explain what this phrase... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/05/22/236148/id-cards-10-things-you-might-not-know.htm
...powers have been used but scuttlebut indicates that most actual usage is related to child abuse investigations or "serious crime" (e.g. drug and people traffficking). The allegations regarding dog fouling, fly-tipping and school catchment... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/when-it-meets-politics/2008/08/big-brother-database-or-sensib.html
...presentations on Internet Governance, when it comes to solutions to crime, one size does not fit all. What we need to tackle serious crime is rarely effective for more trivial offences. Interception laws were not designed with dog fouling in mind. We... http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/david_lacey/2008/06/the_solution_needs_to_fit_the.html
...crime. "As more and more people go online, this problem is going to grow, and e-crime is often part of a more serious crime such as drugs and terrorism." PricewaterhouseCoopers has just completed the 2008 survey on information security... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/03/20/229946/home-office-cannot-find-1.3m-to-fund-e-crime-unit.htm
...made in a case. A person's DNA profile should only be kept for a limited period if they have been convicted of a serious crime and where destroying that information is likely to pose a risk to the public. There must be more of a balance between... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/08/12/237291/dna-database-revision-still-breaks-law-says-watchdog.htm
...straightforward to comply with disclosure orders. Ministers say the powers are an essential tool to fight terrorism and other serious crime. "We totally support the objective, because the government does need to be able to tackle crime and terrorism... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2006/10/10/219029/banks-voice-unease-on-new-police-data-powers.htm
...Immigration Department and local governments to create new services, such as employment vetting The government published a Serious Crime Bill last week that lays the groundwork for large-scale data matching across departments The plans follow a cabinet... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2007/01/23/221343/smaller-project-same-price-for-id-card-plan.htm
...Office argues that it helps police convict people if their DNA is found, and can be identified, at the scene of a serious crime. The European Court of Human Rights ruled last year that the UK database infringes human rights. Two men whose... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/05/07/235928/innocents-to-be-kept-for-12-years-on-dna-database.htm

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