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Перевод: interception speek interception


[существительное]
перехват ; перехватывание; подслушивание; преграждение; преграда


Тезаурус:

  1. Cox argued that the interception had been unlawful because it did not meet the published criteria regulating such interceptions.
  2. Unlike applications for interception in other criminal cases there was no procedure for judicial authorization in the case of security applications.
  3. Interception in practice So warrants could be issued only on very limited grounds: either for major subversive or espionage activities, or for the detection of really serious crime.
  4. The second task was the interception of everyone else's messages around the world and, where possible, decoding them.
  5. Mechanical protection works are permanent structures of earth or masonry which are designed to protect soil from water erosion, and to conserve water as a resource by means of interception, diversion and deceleration of surface and sub-surface run off.
  6. Indeed, the Home Secretary, Mr Leon Brittan, took great pride in the fact that, unlike any of its predecessors, the Conservative Government had provided for the first time a clear and comprehensive statutory framework for the interception of communications.
  7. In fact the legislation - the Interception of Communications Act 1985 - was on the statute book while the Ruddock case was being decided.
  8. The Kiwis wasted two excellent try opportunties with careless forward passes, and gifted St Helens the opening try when David Watson allowed Alan Hunte a 15th-minute interception.
  9. On 7 September an Alert No. 1 ("Cromwell") - i.e. invasion expected within twelve hours - was sent out in Britain, following the interception on 5 September of Goering's order for a mass raid on London docks, involving 300 bombers - a switch from the target of the battered airfields.
  10. As so defined, this ground for interception was wide enough to cover just about anything, from murder to breach of the peace.
  11. (e) The independent inquiry established by NCCL on Civil Liberties and the Miners' Dispute referred in its interim report to a number of complaints which it received about tapping of telephones and the interception of mail.
  12. So far as serious crime was concerned, three conditions had to be satisfied: the crime had to be really serious; the normal methods of investigation had to have been tried and failed; and there had to be good reason to believe that the interception would result in a conviction (Birkett, 1957).
  13. As the years passed, telephone, telex, facsimile and computer data traffic all came under this original warrant, so that not a single communication enters or leaves Britain without being subject to interception by GCCS's successor, GCHQ.

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