what did you do ???????????/ that is the question.
2006-08-31 11:33:09
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answer #1
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answered by SCRUFFY 2
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These answers are scary.
If its a court order - a company would be foolish to ignore it or refuse to comply. Try to appeal the ruling...but that's a tough road. Yahoo privacy policy - nice, but irrelevant. Promise by Yahoo to keep them confidential? -- good for them, a court doesnt care.
Anyone can be "compel-ed" by a court (especially criminal court) for ANY property. Without further facts from you, its difficult to explain further.
The lawyer stuff---this is not legal advice - consult an Alabama lawyer
2006-08-31 22:41:31
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answer #2
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answered by NCAF33 3
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Generally, yes. It's in their Terms of Service.
You consent, when using their service, to allow them to comply with legal requests for information.
If you want to fight the court order, your attorney should either oppose the motion or file a protective order limiting access during discovery.
2006-08-31 18:29:18
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answer #3
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answered by coragryph 7
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Absolutely they can- yahoo is a public server and you do not pay for privacy of your using thier servers.
Any email not stored on your personal PC is considered public since 99% of US companies have any and all rights to view employee emails and regulary do so to protect company secrets, and itself from prosecution should someone send offensive or illegal information over its network.
Once you hit send consider anything you write public domain.
2006-08-31 18:34:56
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answer #4
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answered by Answerkeeper 4
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I believe they can. You could read the fine print in the terms and agreements section.
2006-08-31 18:29:28
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answer #5
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answered by a_blue_grey_mist 7
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depends on the state laws. ask your attorney, or you can look it up in the library.
2006-08-31 18:29:42
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answer #6
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answered by sweettea 3
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Not here. But in some places I imagine it can happen.
2006-08-31 18:29:21
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes of course they can.
2006-08-31 18:29:43
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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