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Перевод: interception
[существительное] перехват ; перехватывание; подслушивание; преграждение; преграда
Тезаурус:
- Cox argued that the interception had been unlawful because it did not meet the published criteria regulating such interceptions.
- Unlike applications for interception in other criminal cases there was no procedure for judicial authorization in the case of security applications.
- 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.
- The second task was the interception of everyone else's messages around the world and, where possible, decoding them.
- 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.
- 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.
- In fact the legislation - the Interception of Communications Act 1985 - was on the statute book while the Ruddock case was being decided.
- 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.
- 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.
- As so defined, this ground for interception was wide enough to cover just about anything, from murder to breach of the peace.
- (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.
- 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).
- 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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