nightkingdoms
Member
- Reaction score
- 11
- Location
- Arizona
Do you get a copy of there ID when a client requests a reformat of there computer? What's the difference?
Oh wow... In the 13+ years I've been working on computers, I have had a client request an N&P explicitly once. The difference is that I'm the one that suggests a format, not the client. They want it fixed, not nuked.
There would be no court in the country that would hold a computer repairer liable or responsible for a password reset on a computer that may or may not be stolen.
And yes, a common law (e.g. UK/USA) court will convict you if you didn't do what a reasonable person would do under the circumstances. Your regular work order terms are for civil (or tort) violations where someone can sue you, not criminal charges. A pawn shop has a reasonable excuse, they get merchandise all the time, only police can run things, so they get their information and usually a copy of their ID which they give over to the police anyway by law. They make a reasonable effort to identify the person and whether it is stolen.
You, however, were literally and specifically hired to hack into a computer system that did not belong to you nor the client. You made no reasonable attempt at confirming the identity of the person in possession of the computer nor if it was stolen. Knowingly committing computer tampering is a felony in most cases. The "knowingly" part doesn't apply to whether you knew if it was stolen or not, it's whether you did the act of exceeding your rights on the system or not whether that'd be negligently or maliciously. In this case it would be negligently which would open you up for a civil suit by the owner as well because you opened their computer up to a thief that would otherwise never been able to make use of the computer.
I would be more concerned about you having the legal right to obtain copy of someones ID, yes you may request to have a look at there ID and compare photo's but you should not be making copies it at all.
Legally-speaking (in the U.S. anyway), every person has a legal right to obtain a copy of someone's ID. The restrictions imposed by things like the Constitution only apply to the government, the populous in general are not. All you have to do is ask, if they refuse, so can you to work on it. It's that simple. No, you can't demand or force someone to give up their ID, but if they want service from you, you can require it. If they refuse, they can go somewhere else.
And what in the world would I be comparing photos of exactly if the system is prevented from moving past the Welcome screen? Whether or not they look like a Duck/Dog/Chess Piece kinda person? lol