PogoWasRight.org

Menu
  • About
  • Privacy
Menu

UK: Goldsmiths win court privacy order on hacked e-mails

Posted on March 22, 2011 by pogowasright.org

Details of personal e-mails from Tory MP Zac Goldsmith’s ex-wife Sheherazade and his sister Jemima Khan should not be published, the High Court has ruled.

It has emerged a woman hacked their e-mail accounts and passed details to a national newspaper journalist.

The case was made subject to a “super injunction” in 2008, meaning nothing could be written about it at all.

Mr Justice Tugendhat ruled the contents of the e-mails should be kept secret, but the super injunction should end.

Read more on BBC.

Category: CourtNon-U.S.

Post navigation

← UDID: The Next Privacy Frontier?
Tyler Clementi’s parents want roommate prosecuted, not severely punished →

Now more than ever

Search

Contact Me

Email: info@pogowasright.org

Mastodon: Infosec.Exchange/@PogoWasRight

Signal: +1 516-776-7756

Categories

Recent Posts

  • License Plate Reader Company Flock Is Building a Massive People Lookup Tool, Leak Shows
  • FTC dismisses privacy concerns in Google breakup
  • ARC sells airline ticket records to ICE and others
  • Clothing Retailer, Todd Snyder, Inc., Settles CPPA Allegations Regarding California Consumer Privacy Act Violations
  • US Customs and Border Protection Plans to Photograph Everyone Exiting the US by Car
  • Google agrees to pay Texas $1.4 billion data privacy settlement
  • The App Store Freedom Act Compromises User Privacy To Punish Big Tech

RSS Recent Posts on DataBreaches.net

  • Turkish Group Hacks Zero-Day Flaw to Spy on Kurdish Forces
  • Cyberattacks on Long Island Schools Highlight Growing Threat
  • Dior faces scrutiny, fine in Korea for insufficient data breach reporting; data of wealthy clients in China, South Korea stolen
  • Administrator Of Online Criminal Marketplace Extradited From Kosovo To The United States
  • Twilio denies breach following leak of alleged Steam 2FA codes
©2025 PogoWasRight.org. All rights reserved.
Menu
  • About
  • Privacy