so basically, a 'right' is whatever YOUR interpretation of it is.Flying_Monkey said:Oh dear. And you were doing so well. As you have been told in several other threads over recent days, you are an idiot.
First, you need to learn what a 'right' is, and how the term is understood in law. As for my interpretation of the ruling, it is derived from an intimate knowledge of the entire case, the views of the judges and of many different lawyers. And yours is based on what exactly? I don't think you know anything about it.

I'm not bothered how it's derived, what is the succinct definition of it?
If you can't define it, how can you claim to have one?
What a f**king ungrateful twat.Flying_Monkey said:All rights are circumscribed. They apply to people to certain degrees with certain conditions. Of course there is no absolute right to privacy in public places. Neither I nor the ruling said that there is. The right to privacy in public places applies to intimate acts in public whose wider publication would have a negative impact upon a person's life.
It is a long story, but briefly... the original case related to a man who was mentally ill and tried to commit suicide at night with a knife. The act was caught on camera and as a result he was saved. So far so good. However the operator of the camera allowed the footage to be used for other purposes, inluding public broadcast, which allowed the person to be identified - although they masked his face, his distinctive hairstyle made him recognisable. The plaintiff successfully argued that this breached his human rights because, although he had tried to kill himself in a public place, he could legitimately expect that act to be regarded as an intimate and private act and that the operator of the camera had a duty not to publicise the footage, and had failed to protect his privacy by doing so. This ruling, which overruled the Law Lords, gives us a right of privacy in public places in England and Wales. It is a right that is probably rather limited, but as it is a right that as yet remains untested in British courts, so far as I know, we do not know how far judges will chose to interpret it, if given the opportunity to do so...
This is exactly the type of soulless epitome of how our once proud nation is being washed down the shitpan with the deluge of the poisonous, grasping 'rights'-based culture.
He had a bit of a turn, and he was saved. Instead of thinking how he could thank the camera operator for saving his life, and how his experience could be used to help others, no - his first thought was 'how much compo can I screw out of them'. For helping me.
You're perpetuating the 'rights'-based culture. I wish you would concentrate on things that are actually unethical instead of conducting an education campaign about what people's rights are based on a case of such awful ethical outcome.