Tags:
a good solution for 'he said she said' arguments against possibly road raged drivers, like the pritzker case
The cycling organisation CTC says the more people cycle, the safer it becomes, as drivers become used to watching out for bicycles. The organisation says there has been a 91% increase in cycling in London alone since 2000, while casualties have dropped by a third.
However, there are still around 17,000 injuries a year and 104 deaths in 2009, the latest year that official figures are available for.
I sure hope this is just a case of a very poorly written article and those are worldwide figures, or at least UK-wide, and not London stats.
If I'm not mistaken, it is illegal to record the audio of a person without their knowledge in Illinois. Video is still legal.
If you are unaware of the current crackdown on public recording, that gizmodo article seems like a good primer.
John L. Jensen said:
If I'm not mistaken, it is illegal to record the audio of a person without their knowledge in Illinois. Video is still legal.
If you are unaware of the current crackdown on public recording, that gizmodo article seems like a good primer.
John L. Jensen said:
Four cases prosecuted in Illinois.
http://www.myjournalcourier.com/articles/illinois-28482-court-aclu....
H3N3 said:
I'd be interested to hear whether anyone in Illinois besides Chris Drew has been charged with illegal recording before calling it a "crackdown."
Joe TV said:
If I'm not mistaken, it is illegal to record the audio of a person without their knowledge in Illinois. Video is still legal.
If you are unaware of the current crackdown on public recording, that gizmodo article seems like a good primer.
John L. Jensen said:
Four cases prosecuted in Illinois.
http://www.myjournalcourier.com/articles/illinois-28482-court-aclu....
H3N3 said:I'd be interested to hear whether anyone in Illinois besides Chris Drew has been charged with illegal recording before calling it a "crackdown."
Joe TV said:
If I'm not mistaken, it is illegal to record the audio of a person without their knowledge in Illinois. Video is still legal.
If you are unaware of the current crackdown on public recording, that gizmodo article seems like a good primer.
John L. Jensen said:
too lazy too research at the moment too, but isnt general recording in public acceptable as long as its not a cop? and not being used for a proper film?
too lazy too research at the moment too, but isnt general recording in public acceptable as long as its not a cop? and not being used for a proper film?
Thanks for doing the footwork to find some supporting info Serge.
I'd like to read just one article on this topic that just presents the facts and isn't clearly intended to use overdramatization and overstatement to outrage.
Headline:
Body:
That's up to 75 years in prison for breaking a law Allison did not know existed, and which he violated in the name of protecting himself from what he saw as an injustice.
One might easily conclude the guy is rotting in jail with a 75 year sentence and not bother to read further.
Serge Lubomudrov said:
More here.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members