It's also the first case I've noticed where it's been used.
If The Daily Mail has done their research correctly (hahahahaha), it's the fourth time a prosecution has resulted in a conviction under this law (see final paragraphs)
"In 2008 the then Labour Home Secretary Jacqui Smith told the House of Commons the legal provisions for withholding passwords and encryption keys to hard drives came into force on 1 October 2007 and eight notices have been served on PC users - four of which had resulted in prosecutions all relating to terrorism activity.
Last year the first person jailed for not giving police access to encrypted material, was a 33-year old businessman known only as JFL.
He was not judged to be a threat to national security, and the encrypted material in question was not suspected of securing illegal material.
The man who ran a software company in London told a judge he was refusing to disclose the code on principle, on the basis that he should have a right to silence but was jailed for 13 months for refusing to hand over his decryption keys."
I'm sure you'd have an easier time finding Englishmen willing to die for Queen Liz than Americans willing to die for president Obama.
There are about 1.2M active US troops at present, UK has under 200K. Ho hum.
Also, you can probably add Charles to the list of mad royalty and at least one of his siblings is a right tit. I agree with your post, though, someone needs to look after the long term interests of the country, rather than the short sighted approach that all politicians have (being "how can I line my own pockets as quickly as possible before I get the boot from the job").
Very old, all that. H// has a chequered history:
Sued by Cisco for nicking their IOS software (settled out of court, but H// withdrew all routing gear and made software changes).
Sued by Motorola (last week) for passing on trade secrets (no idea how valid, but it appears to be a follow on from a case last year, also involving another company called Lemko)
Anecdotally, I've heard of their engineers opening up competitor equipment to take pics while onsite at a customer premises.
Internally, I know they have very strict data protection policies as it is commonplace for workers to leave the company with a pile of docs, walk into a position at a competing company and hand them over - basically no computers allowed out of the buildings, USB ports and CD/DVD writers disabled. Mobile phones have to be very basic - no cameras on them...
On the other hand, it's not just Huawei that does it - it seems to be the culture in China to behave this way.
The gorilla at Longleat Safari Park has a big plasma/LCD screen with satellite and has to be actively discouraged from using it too much - he has the controller to use, too, I seem to recall.
Can't remember what we were told was his favourite show, though
well, at least the 15,000 folks that bought one won't be getting a refund.
And the project isn't really canned, as it will be rolled out for non-EU foreign nationals wishing to stay (cue thin end of wedge) so most of the contractors will still stay on the gravy train.
I wonder how many pieces it was in after it was terminated
"Something then occurred that caused the vehicle to lose acceleration. At that point, the X-51A was terminated as planned."
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