PogoWasRight.org

Menu
  • About
  • Privacy
Menu

NZ: Kim Dotcom wins Human Rights Tribunal case, declares extradition bid ‘over’

Posted on March 26, 2018June 25, 2025 by Dissent

Newshub reports:

The Human Rights Tribunal has ruled that the Attorney-General broke the law by withholding information from Kim Dotcom, which he says means his extradition case is “over”.

In July 2015, Mr Dotcom sent an urgent information privacy request to all 28 Ministers of the Crown as well as almost all Government departments, asking for personal information they had on him, including under his previous names.

Read more on Newshub.  Dotcom  then called for the resignation of the Privacy Commissioner of New Zealand:

I call for the immediate resignation of the Privacy Commissioner of New Zealand for his complicity with the former Attorney General and Crown Law in unlawfully withholding information that New Zealanders were legally entitled to.

— Kim Dotcom (@KimDotcom) March 26, 2018

No related posts.

Category: Non-U.S.

Post navigation

← Despite privacy concerns, Israel to put nation’s medical database online
How I went dark in Australia’s surveillance state for 2 years →

Now more than ever

Search

Contact Me

Email: [email protected]

Mastodon: Infosec.Exchange/@PogoWasRight

Signal: +1 516-776-7756

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Upstate NY county clerk again refuses to enforce Texas abortion judgment
  • Attorney General James Leads Coalition Urging Congress to Protect Americans from Masked ICE Agents
  • Attorney General Tong Announces $85,000 Settlement with TicketNetwork for Violations of the Connecticut Data Privacy Act​
  • Fourth Circuit upholds West Virginia ban on abortion pills
  • Meta fixes bug that could leak users’ AI prompts and generated content
  • The EU’s Plan To Ban Private Messaging Could Have a Global Impact (Plus: What To Do About It)
  • A Balancing Act: Privacy Issues And Responding to A Federal Subpoena Investigating Transgender Care

RSS Recent Posts on DataBreaches.net

©2025 PogoWasRight.org. All rights reserved.