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by mattmanser
1774 days ago
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I personally think it's fair enough, the company probably claimed it was secure, therefore he must have hacked them. The police reacted, but when he could show it clearly wasn't secure and exposed to the public, they dropped it. And hopefully gave the company a private ticking off about wasting police time. In the UK, an arrest under reasonable suspicion gives them the right to search your property for evidence, and to be honest they had reasonable suspicion, he had private company documents. It's not like that company can cry wolf again, the police will be far more skeptical next time of their claims, having dealt with them before. |
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it is absolutely not fair. The fair would be if the company had to show before the arrest that it was minimally secure. I mean they for sure had the HTTP transaction in their own logs - like GET document, response 200. They couldn't have reasonably in good faith claim "secure" and "hacking". What the company did is bordering on the false police report, and it would be fair if there were a recourse for the falsely arrested to use against the company.