Brochure More information from http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/2104103/ Digital Camera Market in India 2012 Description: Digital camera market in India can be characterized with strong growth potential in the ensuing years. Currently‚ the market is mainly dominated by a handful of players and a cut-throat competition exists amongst these players. The market was valued at INR 17.5 bn during the fiscal year 2010 and is expected to attain a CAGR of 43% to reach INR 104.6 bn by 2015. Rising
Premium Digital single-lens reflex camera Marketing
------------------------------------------------- ‘The law has gone too far in restraining freedom of the press in the interests of privacy’. Discuss. Recent jurisprudence stemming from the incorporation of the ECHR through the Human Rights Act 1998 has led to the alleged emergence of a tort of misuse of private information from the expansion of an action of breach of confidence‚ English courts’ attempt to balance Article 8 and Article 10 rights. If we assume that the right to private lives and
Premium Privacy law Human rights
History of Camera “Photography” is derived from the Greek word photos meaning light‚ and graphein meaning to draw. The word was first used by the scientist Sir John F.W. Herschel in 1839. It’s a method of recording images by the action of light‚ or related radiation on a sensitive material. Alhazen (Ibn Al-Haytham)‚ a great authority on optics in the middle ages who lived around 1000 Ad‚ invented the first pinhole camera. The first casual reference to the optic laws of pinhole cameras was by
Premium Photography
ever over-ride a child’s right to privacy? Fundamental to democracy is the right of the people to know. Democracy dictates that all citizens have a right to be fully informed‚ and thus have a right to know - this applies equally to children as to adults. However‚ counterbalancing the democratic right to know is the right to privacy. It is here that conflict arises – at what stage does the right to know override the right to privacy? The concept of privacy needs to be considered in five key
Premium Privacy Privacy law Education
ASSIGNMENT 2: THE VALUE OF DIGITAL PRIVACY IN AN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AGE. BY: JERMAINE WEST 1) 1) List and describe at least three (3) technologies that allow an individual to research citizens’ private data. The first technology that is looked into is cloud computing. Cloud computing in General is for anything that involves delivering hosted services over the internet. These services are broadly divided into three categories: Infrastructure-as-a
Premium USA PATRIOT Act Electronic Communications Privacy Act
Lawrence Lessig in Code 2.0 argues that the rise of the internet and technology will inevitably lead to an increase in regulation and decrease in our right to privacy. Explain‚ through the use of recent developments and current legislation‚ how technology is challenging accepted concepts of Data Protection and Information Law An Introduction The year is 2010‚ the era is the 21st century; and we‚ citizens of the world‚ are living in the Information Age. Our information is made available
Premium Privacy Privacy law
The Value of Digital Privacy in an Information Technology Age Assignment 2 Dr. Mark P. Glantz Law‚ Ethics & Corp. Governance LEG 500 July 28‚ 2012 The Value of Digital Privacy in an Information Technology Age 1. List and describe at least three (3) technologies that allow an individual to research citizen’s private data. Google.com is a technology which allows an individual to search for information on another person. If you are looking for information
Premium Federal government of the United States Identity theft United States Congress
ideas of what privacy‚ invasion of privacy‚ and privacy rights are‚ but nonetheless most people have ideas or an opinion on such topics. “Definitions of privacy can be couched in descriptive or normative terms. People may view privacy as a derivative notion that rests upon more basic rights such as liberty or property.” (Moore‚ 2008‚ p. 411) Even with the many explanations of privacy rights that we individually claim‚ we should all be able to agree that to some degree our right to privacy is essential
Premium United States Constitution Supreme Court of the United States
PRIVACY Yet people often dole out all kinds of personal information on the Internet that allows such identifying data to be deduced. Services like Facebook‚Twitter and Flickr are oceans of personal minutiae — birthday greetings sent and received‚ school and work gossip‚ photos of family vacations‚ and movies watched. Computer scientists and policy experts say that such seemingly innocuous bits of self-revelation can increasingly be collected and reassembled by computers to help create a picture
Premium Identity theft Personally identifiable information
that “citizens are increasingly forfeiting their privacy whenever they venture out of their homes- or even for that matter‚ while we are at home” (Strossen 126). Surveillance cameras aren’t an invasion of my privacy as long as they work to my benefit for safety purposes only. Wanting safety and security does not mean that you are necessarily giving up your privacy. Take for example‚ the Barbara Katende story in the New York Times. She noticed a camera stationed on a rooftop about 200 yards from her
Premium Facial recognition system Surveillance Camera