Copyright

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When was the copyright first introduced?
1988
1 of 13
What copyrighted items can not be traced?
digital data
2 of 13
what is the consequence of breaking this law?
Fine
3 of 13
the illegal copying or downloading of software
software privacy
4 of 13
the main way in which this law is most commonly broken
Software licencing
5 of 13
governs the use of this data and details the actions that can be taken by data subjects if their data is abused.
The Data Protection Act
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makes it illegal to hack into a computer system and steal the data stored on it.
The Computer Misuse Act
7 of 13
allow different access rights to each area of the premises
Swipe or RFID ID cards
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monitor and record what employees are doing.
CCTV cameras
9 of 13
hardware or software which records the real time activity of a computer user, including the keyboard keys they press, or collects screen captures (prints)
Key logging
10 of 13
obtaining of the current position of a mobile phone
Mobile phone triangulation
11 of 13
a ‘text file’ which usually contains two pieces of information: a site name and unique user ID.
Cookie
12 of 13
usually involves a loyalty card scheme
Electronic consumer surveillance
13 of 13

Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

What copyrighted items can not be traced?

Back

digital data

Card 3

Front

what is the consequence of breaking this law?

Back

Preview of the front of card 3

Card 4

Front

the illegal copying or downloading of software

Back

Preview of the front of card 4

Card 5

Front

the main way in which this law is most commonly broken

Back

Preview of the front of card 5
View more cards

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