Jaekus wrote:
Not sure if someone's legal medical history is considered "unscrupulous behaviour".
It's something they've done that they don't want people to know about. I certainly wouldn't consider it unscrupulous at all, but there are many who would.
If they did it - tough.
If they didn't - then alleging they did is libellous.
It's a simple distinction. If you don't want something to be in the public domain, don't do it. If someone later tells people what you've done you have no one to blame but yourself for doing it in the first place. People have to live with the decisions they make.
The guy involved in this is clearly a complete prick - but you can't make laws which potentially have an enormous impact based on such insignificant bullshit - otherwise this sort of shit happens:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Briti … ontroversyThis is an unfortunate case, but what's the impact to society in general?
You could make revealing a persons medical history an offence - that would work, to a point, but as with all privacy laws it would be full of holes and really stupid. For example, someone takes a few weeks of work after breaking their arm - someone in work says "where is person x?" Person y says "he broke his arm" - suddenly they've broken the law and could potentially be prosecuted. What a ridiculous scenario.
The only distinction that works is the distinction between what is true and what is not.
It's not like you can really supress information these days anyway. The more you try - the more publicised it gets (The Streisand effect).
Last edited by Bertster7 (2011-06-11 06:27:20)