The Swiss cabinet held an extraordinary meeting Monday on UBS AG’s (UBS) legal problems with U.S. tax authorities, a move analysts say could signal Switzerland is close to bowing to the U.S. on demands to hand over data. A spokeswoman for the government didn’t comment on details of the meeting, but analysts say Switzerland is…
Category: Non-U.S.
Privacy and personal photos at heart of case
A decision released by the Supreme Court of Canada last month raises the interesting question of how much privacy an individual may expect with respect to personal photographs taken inside his or her own home. The story began in June 2001. Agnieska Wojtanowska (Agnes) lived with Douglas Weil in a house in the Regional Municipality…
Lawyer: Deutsche spied on me like the Stasi
Germany’s biggest bank has been accused of mounting a Stasi-style entrapment operation against a prominent shareholder regarded as a troublemaker. The German authorities are considering launching a criminal investigation into whether Deutsche Bank plotted a honeytrap sting on Michael Bohndorf, a tax lawyer who has bombarded the annual shareholder meetings with embarrassing questions since 2003…
A request to snoop on public every 60 seconds
Councils, police and other public bodies are seeking access to people’s private telephone and email records almost 1,400 times a day, new figures have disclosed. The authorities made more than 500,000 requests for confidential communications data last year, equivalent to spying on one in every 78 adults, leading to claims that Britain had “sleepwalked into…