data abuse - translation to greek
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data abuse - translation to greek

GROWING PHENOMENON PRIMARILY CAUSED BY SYSTEM ADMINISTRATORS AND OFFICE WORKERS WITH ACCESS TO TECHNOLOGY SUCH AS DATABASE SERVERS, DESKTOP COMPUTERS AND A GROWING LIST OF HAND-HELD DEVICES CAPABLE OF STORING DIGITAL INFORMATION
Datatheft; Data Theft; Data-theft; Data burglary; Data abuse

data abuse         
κατάχρηση δεδομένων
data transfer         
PHYSICAL TRANSFER OF DATA; TRANSFER OF DATA (A DIGITAL BIT STREAM OR A DIGITIZED ANALOG SIGNAL) OVER A POINT-TO-POINT OR POINT-TO-MULTIPOINT COMMUNICATION CHANNEL
Data communications; Data transfer; Digital communications; Digital Telecommunications; Digital communication; Data Transfer; Asynchronous transmission; Information transmission; Digital transmission; Network Transmission; Asynchronous data transfer; Data Communications; Data signal; Asynchronous data transmission; Synchronous data transfer; Synchronous data transmission; Transmitted Data; Digital signal (communications); Digital telecommunications; Digital telecommunication; Comms; Digital Communication; Data reception; Data transmission; TxD
μεταφορά δεδομένων
data communication         
PHYSICAL TRANSFER OF DATA; TRANSFER OF DATA (A DIGITAL BIT STREAM OR A DIGITIZED ANALOG SIGNAL) OVER A POINT-TO-POINT OR POINT-TO-MULTIPOINT COMMUNICATION CHANNEL
Data communications; Data transfer; Digital communications; Digital Telecommunications; Digital communication; Data Transfer; Asynchronous transmission; Information transmission; Digital transmission; Network Transmission; Asynchronous data transfer; Data Communications; Data signal; Asynchronous data transmission; Synchronous data transfer; Synchronous data transmission; Transmitted Data; Digital signal (communications); Digital telecommunications; Digital telecommunication; Comms; Digital Communication; Data reception; Data transmission; TxD
επικοινωνία δεδομένων

Definition

mental cruelty
n. a term, rapidly going out of fashion and out of the statutes, which has been used to justify granting a divorce when the state laws required that some wrong had to be found in the defending spouse. In absence of actual physical cruelty (or unwillingness to discuss it) the person wanting the divorce could testify to a list of indignities ("he swore at me, he came home late, he humiliated me in front of friends, he was hateful to my mother, he read girlie magazines," or similar tales told about the wife) which would be verified by a relative or a friend to satisfy the judge that the petitioning spouse would suffer mental harm if the marriage continued and proved that there were grounds for a divorce. As "no-fault" divorce has gained favor, such charades have faded into legal history. See also: cruelty divorce

Wikipedia

Data theft

Data theft is a growing phenomenon primarily caused by system administrators and office workers with access to technology such as database servers, desktop computers and a growing list of hand-held devices capable of storing digital information, such as USB flash drives, iPods and even digital cameras. Since employees often spend a considerable amount of time developing contacts, confidential, and copyrighted information for the company they work for, they may feel they have some right to the information and are inclined to copy and/or delete part of it when they leave the company, or misuse it while they are still in employment. Information can be sold and bought and then used by criminals and criminal organizations. Alternatively, an employee may choose to deliberately abuse trusted access to information for the purpose of exposing misconduct by the employer. From the perspective of the society, such an act of whistleblowing can be seen as positive and is protected by law in certain situations in some jurisdictions, such as the USA.

A common scenario is where a sales person makes a copy of the contact database for use in their next job. Typically, this is a clear violation of their terms of employment.

Notable acts of data theft include those by leaker Chelsea Manning and self-proclaimed whistleblowers Edward Snowden and Hervé Falciani.