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Computer Forensics, Privacy & the Law
Tags >> pornography

Motion for Rule 37 Sanctions Denied -- Plaintiff sued defendant, alleging a variety of injuries related to his employment termination. The defendant denied the charges, contending that plaintiff was fired for using one of the defendant's static IP addresses to operate a commercial pornography Web site.


According to an exclusive report in the conservative journal The Washington Times, the National Science Foundation experienced a six-fold increase in employee misconduct investigations, many of which involved use of government equipment to access pornographic Web sites during the work day.


A British data recovery firm, Disklabs Data Recovery and Computer Forensics Services, reports that nearly 70% of hard drives and flash drives purchased at random on eBay contained pornographic files.

Many of the drives also still contained valid work files containing personal information on CVs and in spreadsheets. In addition, most of the previous owners had not taken the steps necessary to wipe out the Internet cache files, which frequently retain highly personal information: user IDs, passwords, birthdates, and credit card numbers, all of which can be used to commit identity theft.


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