Is sexting a bad idea?
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Is sexting a bad idea?
Sexting can cause serious problems whether you send them or share them. The pics might get sent around or posted online, where people like your family, teachers, and friends could see them. Sharing these pictures or messages without permission is a serious violation of privacy and isn’t ok.
Are text agreements legally binding?
Under the E-Sign Act of 2000, contracts signed electronically are given the same weight as paper and ink contracts. As long as these conditions are met, text messages and other forms of electronic communication are considered legally enforceable contracts in court.
Do screenshots hold up in court?
Screenshots of digital messages are regularly served as evidence in criminal cases, usually to support allegations like harassment and malicious communications. However, they can appear in any case where digital messages are capable of supporting the prosecution case.
Is Screenshotting conversations illegal?
There is no legal assumption of privacy on the Internet (that’s why google can sell your information), so for a personal record of the conversation, yes you can screenshot it. Text messages are not considered private conversations and since you are texting about someone else.
Can you sue someone for screenshots?
Unless someone owes you confidentiality by law, like an attorney or a doctor or by contract, like a non-disclosure agreement you cannot successfully sue someone for disclosing a screenshot of a text exchange any more than you can sue someone who repeats something you verbally tell them.
Are screenshots legal evidence?
If a person seeks to tender a screenshot as evidence of the truth of a statement it contains, it will be excluded as inadmissible hearsay. However, if it is tendered to establish the fact that the relevant statement or representation was made, then it can be admissible as direct evidence.
Are cell phone pictures admissible in court?
The High Court made it clear that in order for a cell phone photograph to be admissible it: must be relevant; the device, on which the photo was captured, should be reliable.