| privacy | the quality of being secluded from the presence or view of others the condition of being concealed or hidden Printed letters; the impression taken from type, as to excellence, form, size, etc | en |
| Privacy | (1) The right to be let alone; (2) in insurance contexts, the right to fair personal information practices Probate: The court-supervised process of validating or establishing a distribution for assets of a deceased including the payment of outstanding obligations | en |
| Privacy | The right of an individual to be secure from unauthorized disclosure of information about oneself that is contained in documents/archives [SAA] | en |
| Privacy | Privacy protects authorized participants from illegal utilization or knowledge of information related to their behavior or personal information | en |
| Privacy | The quality or condition of being free from unsanctioned intrusion Communications need to reassure the prospect through clear, accessible and enforced assurances so he/she can feel comfortable about providing personal information and transacting business | en |
| Privacy | Ensuring that individuals maintain the right to control what information is collected about them and how it is used as well | en |
| Privacy | In genetics, the right of people to restrict access to their genetic information | en |
| Privacy | The state or quality of being secluded from the view and or presence of others | en |
| Privacy | For purposes of the HIPAA Privacy Rule, privacy means an individual's interest in limiting who has access to personal health care information | en |
| Privacy | * It is common to distinguish three species of privacy: physical, informational, and decisional In addition, philosopher and legal theorist Anita Allen distinguishes dispositional privacy Physical privacy is a restriction on the ability of others to experience a person through one or more of the five senses; informational privacy is a restriction on facts about the person that are unknown or unknowable; and decisional privacy is the exclusion of others from decisions, such as health care decisions or marital decisions, made by the person and his group of intimates Finally, dispositional privacy is a restriction on the ability of others to know a person's states of mind | en |
| Privacy | Privacy is defined as the right to freedom from unauthorized intrusion Increasing use of e-mail, cell phones, closed-circuit surveillance cameras, checkout scanners and other technologies has made it easier to gather volumes of information about individuals-including buying and spending habits, finances, lifestyles, preferences, and movements Concerned about how these growing databases will be used and the rise of companies that openly trade in consumer information, consumer advocate and privacy watchdog groups are calling for legislated protection In response, many Websites now post privacy policies disclosing how they collect, use, and share information These often include opt-in or -out buttons << Return | en |
| Privacy | confidentiality of personal information | en |
| Privacy | control over the extent, timing and circumstances of sharing oneself (physically, behaviorally, or intellectually) with others | en |
| Privacy | The level of protection an organization provides for personal data that consumers supply when they use a Web site, register at a Web site, or buy from a Web site | en |
| Privacy | Privacy is becoming more and more of a concern on the Internet Anyone whom you give information such as your email address or credit card number can very easily give that information to someone else One can safeguard against credit card theft by only frequenting trustworthy sites and using one's judgement On the other hand, there are no laws against email address collection; many otherwise trustworthy organisations collect email addresses and sell them to spammers, or simply put out spam on their own Many people give out false email addresses to work against this A particularly popular method is spam-proofing | en |
| Privacy | – Control over the extent, timing, and circumstances of sharing oneself (physically, behaviorally, or intellectually) with others | en |
| Privacy | Roughly the ability of a person to limit what computers that know about him can say about him to other people and computers | en |
| Privacy | Privacy is the protection of sensitive and personal information from unintentional and intentional attacks and disclosure | en |
| Privacy | The right for an individual to be free from identification, classification, or observation by another party without their consent Also involves the right of individuals to control third party access to information about them that may be considered personal in nature | en |
| Privacy | POLICY - a statement on a web site describing what information about you is collected by the site, and how it is used Ideally, the policy is posted prominently and offers you options about the use of your personal information These options are called opt-in and opt-out An opt-in choice means the web site won't use your information unless you specifically say it's okay An opt-out choice means the web site can use the information unless you specifically direct it not to | en |
| Privacy | out of the view of others; implies some form of security to keep it private, but security must be expressly used to insure privacy; privacy policies make claims to insure privacy of information | en |
| Privacy | The right of an individual to be secure from unauthorized disclosure of information about oneself that is contained in documents (SAA) | en |
| Privacy | A Murdoch Convention to be applied in the preparation of Content is the use of privacy statements to inform end-users of what information is gathered and what is done with the information gathered | en |
| Privacy | the condition of being concealed or hidden | en |
| Privacy | -For citizens and consumers, freedom from unauthorized intrusion For organizations, privacy involves the policies that determine what information is gathered, how it is used, and how customers are informed and involved in this process Privacy is a legal issue, but it's also an information security issue Customer outrage over stolen credit card numbers, for instance, is a privacy problem brought about by inadequate security | en |
| Privacy | the quality of being secluded from the presence or view of others | en |
| Privacy | A major concern of Internet users that largely involves the sharing of personally identifiable information, which includes name, birth date, Social Security number and financial data, for example | en |
| Privacy | A source of concern to many on the Internet is how much personal information on them is available to all who look for it Wherever you open an account on the Internet and World Wide Web, you are asked for personal information What happens to this information? Do you have a rignt to privacy? See our article on Privacy: What Can Others Learn About You? See also, Delphi's Privacy Policy | en |
| privacy | That which is produced by printing | en |
| privacy | An impression taken from anything, as from an engraved plate | en |
| privacy | as, small print; large print; this line is in print | en |
| privacy | A printed publication, more especially a newspaper or other periodical | en |
| privacy | See Privity, 2 | en |
| privacy | The state of being private; the state of not being seen by others | en |
| privacy | A printed cloth; a fabric figured by stamping, especially calico or cotton cloth | en |
| privacy | The state of being in retirement from the company or observation of others; seclusion | en |
| privacy | If you have privacy, you are in a place or situation which allows you to do things without other people seeing you or disturbing you. He saw the publication of this book as an embarrassing invasion of his privacy a collection of over 60 designs to try on in the privacy of your own home | en |
| privacy | If someone or something invades your privacy, they interfere in your life without your permission. The press invade people's privacy unjustifiably every day | en |
| privacy | seclusion, solitude, reclusion; state of being private, secrecy, confidentiality; freedom from harassment or disturbance isim | en |
| privacy | A photographic copy, or positive picture, on prepared paper, as from a negative, or from a drawing on transparent paper | en |
| privacy | Concealment of what is said or done | en |
| privacy | A place of seclusion from company or observation; retreat; solitude; retirement | en |
| privacy | A private matter; a secret | en |