In Canada, the Federal Court of Appeal in BMG Canada v Doe (2005) held that copyright owners had an equitable right to get
subscriber information where they had a legitimate and bona fide claim, subject to balancing the claim against subscribers» privacy considerations.
Not exact matches
Every effort is made to keep Materials up to date but
Subscribers and Authorised Users should obtain independent verification or advice before relying on any piece of
information in circumstances
where loss or damage may result.
This is
where the
subscribers get to post some basic personal
information like interests, hobbies, and the description of the type of persons they'd want to connect with.
SIRIUS utilizes its nationwide satellite - radio broadcast capabilities to provide
subscribers with updated traffic
information where available, displayed on their navigation screen to help select the best available route.
«When you have that
information, you can start to compile it and work out kind of a composite
subscriber based on
where they're coming from, and then you can compare the cost of acquiring that
subscriber with the revenue you suspect you might make from them going forward.
Exceptions to the obligation to provide
information and offer the right to refuse should be limited to those situations
where the technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the
subscriber or user.
This is in spite of the fact that the constitutionality of this
information sharing has been questioned in R. v. Trapp, 2011 SKCA 143,
where the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal found a reasonable expectation of privacy exists in voluntarily disclosed
subscriber data (although see Trapp's sister case, R. v. Spencer, 2011 SKCA 144 which concludes there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in similar contexts — the ISP contractual terms being the operative difference).
The first is telephone directory
information (but only
where the
subscriber has the option to opt out of being included in the directory).
What's more, the emails lacked links that would strategically drive traffic to the Jaffe website,
where subscribers could gain more
information about our range of service offerings.