Sentences with phrase «against potential abuse»

To guard against any potential abuse from bitcoin holders, no one investee owns more than the equivalent of one percent of the network.
The introduction of clear, ethical and financial standards in the form of a Code of Practice, will provide a progressive framework for the use of third party funding in arbitration and mediation in Hong Kong, including robust safeguards to protect against potential abuse.
Cross said he hopes that structure will safeguard against potential abuses in how the money is allocated.

Not exact matches

That centralizes the potential for and magnitude of abuse, with Big Data used to discriminate against groups, steer vulnerable people to financial scams, and meddle in U.S. elections.
ALBANY, NY (AP)-- Former New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who cracked down on insider abuses on Wall Street, said Wednesday that the new federal push against potential insider trading has the hallmarks of important work, if the innovative approach can prove the communication is illegal.
«It is extraordinary how many patients describe themselves as collateral in the war against drugs,» where law enforcement concerns for potential abuse take precedent over the medical imperative to treat suffering, said author — journalist Melanie Thernstrom, who participated on the committee as a patient advocate.
This is an area where policymakers must weigh the needs of low - income families against the potential for abuse.
Schools might consider the potential harm from extremist ideologies and how they might be vocalised by pupils in the wider context of safeguarding against abuse.
But since it does access and store user data (in the alleged interest of protecting its own infrastructure against attacks and abuse) it is essentially observing / warning that the government has declared a potential right to access those data as well.
Court of Queen's Bench Justice Denny Thomas is considering potential costs personally against Priscilla Kennedy, of DLA Piper (Canada) LLP, for advancing litigation that is «abusive and vexatious nature» and could potentially be a «serious abuse» of the judicial system.
It is this potential that is problematic because, even if manipulation is not actually occurring, the lack of objective guarantees or protections against such abuse can breed suspicions or perceptions of want of impartiality, thereby eroding the integrity of, and public confidence in, the administration of justice.
Regardless of the type of maltreatment perpetrated against a child, the potential for lifelong physical and emotional consequences is significant.1 Although seemingly straightforward, the definition of physical abuse is variable.
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