Users can
expect reasonable protection but must take steps to ensure they do not share such information by accident or willfully.
Not exact matches
A European peasant could
expect a
reasonable amount of
protection from his lord, for both body and soul, in exchange for his labor.
It shows its preference for the more flexible common law «
reasonable expectation of privacy» rule, which defines what (information) is and is not amenable to privacy
protection based on what ought to be
expected in a democratic society and in the full factual context.
While seeking assistance from close family members may be a
reasonable expectation, Mr. Miraka could not be
expected to have a babysitter «on call» or attempt to hire a stranger from «Craigslist» or «Kijiji» to look after his children, before falling within the Code's
protection.
Conversely, a property owner is
expected to extend the highest duty of
protection and care to invitees, warning them of any potential dangers and correcting those dangers in a
reasonable time frame.
Lord Cooke stated that, applying the concepts of reasonableness between neighbours and
reasonable foreseeability, a defendant, having been given notice of the nuisance and the opportunity to abate it, might fairly be
expected to bear the cost of reasonably necessary remedial works, and the party on whom the cost fell may recover it, even though there may be elements of hitherto unsatisfied pre-proprietorship damage or «
protection for the future», provided there is no double recovery.