privacy
91privacy — n 1. privateness, intimacy, intimateness, seclusion, solitude, retreat, retirement; isolation, aloneness, loneness, solitariness, loneliness, remoteness, ob scureness, obscurity; aloofness, apartness, separateness, separation; withdrawal,… …
92privacy — pri·va·cy …
93privacy — noun Syn: seclusion, solitude, isolation …
94privacy — [ˈpraɪvəsi] , [ˈprɪvəsi] noun [U] the freedom to do things without other people watching you or knowing what you are doing …
95privacy — /ˈpraɪvəsi / (say pruyvuhsee), /ˈprɪvəsi / (say privuhsee) noun (plural privacies) 1. the state of being private; retirement or seclusion. 2. secrecy. 3. Rare a private place. {priv(ate) + acy} …
96privacy — / prɪvəsi/ noun a situation of not being disturbed by other people, especially the knowledge that communications are private and cannot be accessed by others …
97privacy — / prɪvəsi/ noun a method of ensuring that a person’s personal or credit card payment details cannot be intercepted and read when transferred over the Internet …
98privacy — n. 1 a the state of being private and undisturbed. b a person s right to this. 2 freedom from intrusion or public attention. 3 avoidance of publicity …
99Canadian privacy law — Privacy law is the area of law concerning the protecting and preserving the privacy rights of individuals. By definition, most countries treat privacy as the rights of individuals and not institutions. Governing bodies and NGO s collect vast… …
100Privacy Act — ● np. ►SOC Loi protégeant les citoyens face aux abus informatiques, aux É U, depuis 1974. Équivalent de la loi du 6 janvier 1978 en France, créant la CNIL …