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Showing posts from 2017

The legal effect of fake profiles and how to check one

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"Hello, what number of companions you got on Facebook?" ". 200, possibly?" "Fakes in there?" "What? I don't know, who cares?" Begin minding dear companions! Numbers discharged from Facebook propose that 83 million Facebook accounts are phony. "What of it?" These Facebook records might be human or bots, prevalently known as socialbots that continue making counterfeit records and numerous researchers are on the chase to track them down. They spread spam and infections or trick clients to take their information or as of late, to draw individuals into some demonstrating sham and after that, at last, to get them trafficked or victimized. When you may be helpless, you never know. The best arrangement is to avoid these profiles and absolutely never make one yourself. We'll manage two things here: Legal Implications of Creating a phony profile in India and How to recognize a phony profile: The most effective me...

Pirated music and movies Is punishable with jail

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The problem of piracy in the movie biz does not need introduction . The number of pirated movie copies being openly sold in the market whether secretively or publicly, is massive. Walk into any corner of a local market and you can find people selling DVDs containing your favorite music and movies without any regard to copyright. Then there are those websites where you can “watch movies for free”. What the entire nation needs to understand as one big community is that there is a limit to these free lunches that you think you get. Upon thorough analysis of traffic and search queries it has been found that most people are looking for either this or that but they want a “free download”. The odds have luckily been in our favor that these companies, production houses and businesses don’t usually sue the common man. They try to find the distributors and nab them instead. This turns into the purpose behind numerous different issues like ransomware yet that is a theme for later. Pres...

Pornography in India

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In the event that you make a clear inquiry, the appropriate response is no. The reason such a large number of individuals (not simply youths) need a response to this inquiry is on the grounds that they are expending erotic entertainment and are apprehensive in the case of watching porn is legitimate in India. To break the ice for yet some other time, it is lawful. No one in this nation will place you in the correctional facility for watching porn unless you are doing it out in the open. All things considered, there is the entire open profound quality law being referred to. In any case, as a rule, it is unquestionably legitimate to watch porn in India until and unless it is tyke obscenity. For that regardless of the possibility that you are perplexed about the Pornography rules, you are as wiped out as this gets. No vigilante gatherings, programmers, state bodies and so forth anyplace on the planet bolster the possibility of tyke erotic entertainment. The very truth that youngst...

Sent a profane photograph on a WhatsApp gathering?

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I've been hit with question about foul substance such huge numbers of times that I feel expounding on it is the best arrangement. I need to break down this inquiry on two unique levels: Moral and Legal. We've run over situations where young ladies and folks have sent their private personal pictures on WhatsApp bunches "by botch". The very certainty that they were intended to be sent to another person is disturbing also. The issue with WhatsApp and other moment detachments is that individuals feel "protection". They feel that correspondence is going on balanced and none else will ever observe their private minutes. The Internet is intense and Information Communication Technologies are progressive yet the way that clients feel that there is an alternate arrangement of morals on the web, isn't right. Ethically, Would you click naked pictures, print them, secure them a crate and send through post? In the event that your answer is no, you trul...

Cyber security: India ranked 23rd on a list of 165 nations

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India is ranked a high 23rd out of 165 nations in a global index with a score of 0.683, that measures the commitment of nations across the world to cyber security. The second Global Cyber Security Index (GCI), released by the UN telecommunications agency International Telecommunication Union (ITU), said only about half of all countries have a cyber security strategy or are in the process of developing one and urged more countries to consider national policies to protect against cybercrime. India has been listed in the "maturing" category, which refers to 77 countries that have developed complex commitments to cyber security and has been engaged in cyber security programmes and initiatives for the last so many years. This time the index has been topped by Singapore with a 0.925 score. According to report about 38 percent of countries have a written or published cyber security strategy and an additional 12 percent of governments are in the process of d...

The 13 Criticism Of Cyber Crime Bill Passed In The National Assembly of Pakistan

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The National Assembly (NA) passed the controversial Prevention of Electronic Crimes Bill (PECB) 2015 after the Senate's unanimous adoption of the bill – with 50 amendments – earlier in July.  Focus of criticism :-  Critics say the bill is too harsh, with punishments that do not fit crimes The bill's language leaves it open to abuse by LEAs, agencies, the government Recommendations of stakeholders were ignored in the formulation of the law It restricts freedom of expression and access to information The offences are too numerous, overlap with other existing laws The wording of the bill leaves many clauses open to interpretation The bill specifically can be misused to target journalists’ sources and whistleblowers Criteria for surveillance is even more open-ended than in the Fair Trial Act 2013 Mechanisms for implementation are missing from this bill The bill has introduced clauses on cyberterrorism, which is not the subject of the bill ...