The Privacy Policy and Terms of Service both gave
pretty broad definitions that could mean anything from «we share this with a handful of high level employees and no one else has access» to «we literally just printed a flyer letting everyone know Matt Hughes has seen High School Musical 46 times this year.
That's
a pretty broad definition, and seems to include the majority of online shopping that isn't conducted through a third party (i.e., eBay or some Amazon purchases).
Not exact matches
I'm not a lawyer, but without
pretty clear justification, this would appear to breach Articles 5, 11 and - arguably - 3 of the ECHR (as you said, it was degrading and we have a much
broader definition of torture than our American cousins thank God).
Pretty broad question, but I hear these things thrown around a lot and was wondering if such a canonical or straightforward
definition exists.
Our
definition of Australian crime fiction is
pretty broad so we try to cover all the sub genres of books written by Aussie authors (set anywhere) and books set in Australia (written by anyone).
While the law says the exchange property must be of like - kind, the
definition is
pretty broad.