Privacy
in sentence
638 examples of Privacy in a sentence
The headline says, "NSA broke
privacy
rules thousands of times per year."
We have a right to
privacy.
There was a recent legal article at Yale that established something called the Bankston-Soltani Principle, which is that our expectation of
privacy
is violated when the capabilities of government surveillance have become cheaper by an order of magnitude, and each time that occurs, we need to revisit and rebalance our
privacy
rights.
ES: I would say the last year has been a reminder that democracy may die behind closed doors, but we as individuals are born behind those same closed doors, and we don't have to give up our
privacy
to have good government.
That's sort of been couched as a balance between
privacy
and national security.
And so the fact that these revelations have been broadly characterized as "you can't trust company A because your
privacy
is suspect with them" is actually only accurate in the sense that it's accurate with every other company in the world that deals with any of those countries in the world.
How do you characterize the American citizen's right to
privacy?
And we devote an inordinate amount of time and pressure, inordinate and appropriate, actually I should say, amount of time and effort in order to ensure that we protect that
privacy.
and beyond that, the
privacy
of citizens around the world, it's not just Americans.
So I think absolutely, folks do have a right to privacy, and that we work very hard to make sure that that right to
privacy
is protected.
Do they have any
privacy
rights?
The alternative to that is one that's much less efficient and much more invasive of privacy, which is gigantic amounts of content collection.
The issue of
privacy
and personal data is much bigger than just the government, and so learn the facts.
CR: So we'll have a conversation about the Internet, and we'll have a conversation Google, and we'll have a conversation about search and privacy, and also about your philosophy and a sense of how you've connected the dots and how this journey that began some time ago has such interesting prospects.
It is security and
privacy.
But I think, for me, I guess,
privacy
and security are a really important thing.
We think about it in terms of both things, and I think you can't have
privacy
without security, so let me just talk about security first, because you asked about Snowden and all of that, and then I'll say a little bit about
privacy.
And then there's a
privacy
side of it.
Let me go — (Applause) LP: So I guess I'm just very worried that with Internet privacy, we're doing the same thing we're doing with medical records, is we're throwing out the baby with the bathwater, and we're not really thinking about the tremendous good that can come from people sharing information with the right people in the right ways.
CA: You've obviously guarded their
privacy
carefully for obvious reasons.
I was kind of shocked, actually, because we both work in
privacy
and security.
You give up a little privacy, and you get some convenience or some price breaks in return.
I mean, even if you're cavalier about privacy, I hope that you would admit that's a step too far.
We need the companies to rethink the design of these devices with our
privacy
in mind, because we're not all willing to participate in "market research," just because a device we bought has a Wi-Fi connection.
You're rewarded for revealing your innermost thoughts, your private emotions on the page for the entertainment of others, for the analysis, the scrutiny of others, and perhaps you've given enough of your
privacy
away.
Khalil is a Palestinian hacker from the West Bank, and he found a serious
privacy
flaw on Facebook which he attempted to report through the company's bug bounty program.
I am a computer science and engineering professor here at Carnegie Mellon, and my research focuses on usable
privacy
and security, and so my friends like to give me examples of their frustrations with computing systems, especially frustrations related to unusable
privacy
and security.
Now answer this in the
privacy
of your own head, but Smith says, absolutely not, what a horrid thought.
Those sorts of things are not, they're not out there, and in fact they've acquired a certain amount of
privacy.
I want a web where I can use healthcare with
privacy
and where there's a lot of health data, clinical data is available to scientists to do research.
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